A golf ball of mass 46 g is struck a blow by a club

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A physics exam question involves calculating the average force of impact when a 46 g golf ball is struck by a club, resulting in a projectile motion scenario. The impulse imparted to the ball makes an angle of 25˚ with the horizontal, and it lands 200 m away, bouncing inelastically at a 20˚ angle for a second hop. The average force is derived from the impulse, which is the change in momentum over the time of contact (7 ms). A calculation shows that the average force of impact is approximately 332.396 N after correcting for unit conversions. The discussion emphasizes the relationship between impulse, momentum, and projectile motion in solving the problem.
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A golf ball of mass 46 g is struck a blow by a club...

Hi,
I've been going through some past exam papers for the physics paper I'm doing (I got my exam tomorrow), and I came across this question:

A golf ball of mass 46 g is struck a blow by a club such that the impulse imparted to the ball makes an angle of 25˚ with the horizontal. The ball lands 200 m away on a level fairway, bouncing inelastically off the fair way at an angle of 20˚ for a second 10 m hop and successively moving on until it comes to rest. Assume air resistance is negligible and ignore any effects due to spin in what follows below.

(a) If the golf club and ball are in contact for 7.0 ms, determine the average force of impact

I can't seem to work out how to get the answer, I'm thinking it's got to do with impulse and projectile motion... yet... I am totally lost. Any guidance would be greatly appreciated.

Cheers
 
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Waylander said:
Hi,
I've been going through some past exam papers for the physics paper I'm doing (I got my exam tomorrow), and I came across this question:

A golf ball of mass 46 g is struck a blow by a club such that the impulse imparted to the ball makes an angle of 25˚ with the horizontal. The ball lands 200 m away on a level fairway, bouncing inelastically off the fair way at an angle of 20˚ for a second 10 m hop and successively moving on until it comes to rest. Assume air resistance is negligible and ignore any effects due to spin in what follows below.

(a) If the golf club and ball are in contact for 7.0 ms, determine the average force of impact

I can't seem to work out how to get the answer, I'm thinking it's got to do with impulse and projectile motion... yet... I am totally lost. Any guidance would be greatly appreciated.

Cheers

Impulse is the integral of force over the time interval that force is applied. The average force is the total impulse divided by the time interval. The impulse is equal to the change in momentum of the ball due to that force, which you can calculate from the launch angle and the initial distance to landing.
 
Last edited:
Thanks for your quick reply OlderDan! I think I know what you are saying... Is the following correct?

So is this calculation correct:
from
R=\frac{v^2sin2\theta}g

v=\sqrt{\frac{Rg}{sin2\theta}}

so v = (200*9.8/sin50)^(1/2)
v = 50.582 m/s

J=P_f - P_i = m(v_f - v_i)
so

J = 0.046(50.582 - 0)
J = 2.3268

F_{av} = \frac{J}{{\Delta}t}

F = 2.3268/(7*10^-3)
F = 332.396 N

Edit: Messed up Unit conversion! XD
 
Last edited:
Waylander said:
Thanks for your quick reply OlderDan! I think I know what you are saying... Is the following correct?

So is this calculation correct:
from
R=\frac{v^2sin2\theta}g

v=\sqrt{\frac{Rg}{sin2\theta}}

so v = (200*9.8/sin50)^(1/2)
v = 50.582 m/s

J=P_f - P_i = m(v_f - v_i)
so

J = 0.046(50.582 - 0)
J = 2.3268

F_{av} = \frac{J}{{\Delta}t}

F = 2.3268/(7*10^-3)
F = 332.396 N

Edit: Messed up Unit conversion! XD

Looks OK to me
 
The book claims the answer is that all the magnitudes are the same because "the gravitational force on the penguin is the same". I'm having trouble understanding this. I thought the buoyant force was equal to the weight of the fluid displaced. Weight depends on mass which depends on density. Therefore, due to the differing densities the buoyant force will be different in each case? Is this incorrect?

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