What Is the Optimal Kicking Angle for Maximum Distance in Football?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Stephen Garner
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Angle
AI Thread Summary
The optimal kicking angle for maximum distance in football is determined to be 45 degrees. The discussion highlights the need to analyze the ball's initial velocity components, which depend on the angle of the kick. The kicker's speed of 72 km/h (converted to 20 m/s) is essential for calculating the distance traveled. Participants express confusion over how to incorporate gravity and the angle into their calculations, emphasizing the importance of treating the angle as a variable in the equations. Understanding these components is crucial for predicting the ball's trajectory and maximizing distance.
Stephen Garner
Messages
4
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


The school football team has asked you for advice. During kickoffs the ball is not going far enough. The team's kicker shows you his kicks, and you figure out that he consistently kicks the ball so that it leaves his foot moving at 72 km/h.

a) Predict the best angle for him to try to kick the ball so that it will go as far as possible. [a: 45 degrees]

Homework Equations


X-component: cosΘ = adj/hyp
Y-Component: sinΘ = opp/hyp

vf2 = vi2/ + 2ad

The Attempt at a Solution


I have converted 72 km/h to m/s.

72 * 1000 = 72000 / 3600 = 20m/s

I am confused because course has not asked us to predict an angle given such little data. Am I suppose to use gravity somewhere in here? I don't know how they arrived at 45 degrees.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
How long will the ball be in the air? How far in the x-direction does it travel in that time? (Both as functions of the angle)
 
How do I figure out X-component if I don't have the angle though?
 
Stephen Garner said:
How do I figure out X-component if I don't have the angle though?
You write it as a function of the angle.
 
f(x) = 20x?
 
Stephen Garner said:
f(x) = 20x?
No. Create an unknown to represent the angle. θ would be a standard choice.
Write the initial velocity components in terms of that.
Style tip: ignore the given speed of 20m/s for now. Just call it v. There are many advantages in not plugging in any numbers until the final step.
 
what numbers am I plugging into what? I'm more confused than before. x + y = 180?
 
Stephen Garner said:
what numbers am I plugging into what? I'm more confused than before. x + y = 180?
If the kicker kicks the ball at a speed v and an angle θ to the horizontal, what are the vertical amd horizontal components of its initial velocity?
 
Back
Top