The Edgerton photos reveal that when a
bat strikes a ball, the ball remains in contact with the bat for only a
few thousandths of a second. To reverse the ninety-mile-per-
hour speed of a 5 1/8 ounce baseball in one millisecond, the bat must
push on the ball with eight thousand pounds of force. Imagine a baseball
squashed under four tons of iron and you will begin to understand why
the baseballs in Edgerton's photos are deformed.
From Edgerton's photos and your observations of water
balloons, you can see that balls bounce when they spring back into their
original shape. But why do some balls bounce better than others? The
widely varying results of your experiments suggest that the reasons
depend on a ball's materials and construction.
When you drop a ball, gravity pulls it toward the
floor. The ball gains energy of motion, known as
kinetic energy. When
the ball hits the floor and stops, that energy has to go somewhere. The
energy goes into deforming the ball--from its original round shape to a
squashed shape. When the ball deforms, its molecules are stretched apart
in some places and squeezed together in others. As they are pushed
about, the molecules in the ball collide with and rub across each other.
Exactly what happens to these molecules as they
stretch and squeeze depends on what the ball is made of. Suppose you
drop a ball of putty. Rather than bouncing, it hits the floor and
flattens. All of the organized motion of the falling ball becomes the
random motion of jiggling molecules. The random motion of jiggling
molecules is a measure of thermal energy. The putty gets warmer, but it
doesn't bounce. Putty is
inelastic--it doesn't return to its original shape.
Now suppose you drop a rubber ball. Rubber is made
from long-chain polymer molecules. When you hold the ball in your hand,
these long molecules are tangled together like a ball of molecular
spaghetti. During a collision, these molecules stretch--but only for a
moment. Atomic motions within the rubber molecules then return them
toward their original, tangled shape. Much of the energy of the ball's
downward motion becomes upward motion as the ball returns to its
original shape and bounces into the air. The energy in the ball that
isn't converted into motion becomes warmth. (You can verify this the
next time you play a game of racquetball. At the end of the game, the
ball will be warmer than when you started.)
Rubber balls are elastic because they return
to their original shape. But rubber polymers can be formulated in
different ways: if the polymers are tightly linked, they do not rub
against each other much. The organized motion of the falling ball
becomes an organized deformation of the rubber of the ball, which then
becomes an organized motion of the bounced ball. Click on the link on
this page that represents the "energy of motion". Very little of the
organized motion is lost by warming the ball; most of it goes into
bouncing the ball back into the air. Balls made from this type of rubber
are called "superballs." On the other hand, rubber polymers can be made
in which the molecules move more freely, rub together more, and turn
organized motion into disorganized vibration. The ball will hardly
bounce. Instead, it gets warm.
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