Why is my rebound height not following the expected trendline?

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The discussion focuses on an experiment involving two balls of different masses and their rebound heights when dropped from the same height. The crude method of adding mass to the smaller ball has altered its aerodynamics, causing an unbalanced weight distribution that leads to increased spin and a "wonky" bounce. This spin absorbs energy that would otherwise contribute to rebound height, resulting in lower-than-expected measurements. The conversation also touches on how adding weights affects the moment of inertia and the ball's center of mass, influencing its rotational dynamics upon impact. Overall, the findings suggest that the method of mass addition significantly impacts the rebound behavior of the balls.
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My Experiment consists of two balls of different masses falling together in the y-axis from the same fixed height.Im researching how mass of the smaller ball affects its rebound height. My method of adding mass however was very crude as I stuck weights on using tape. This surely altered the aerodynamics of the ball and I did notice an increased spin on the ball, (unbalanced weight arrangeent?). What does this mean? The energy given by the larger ball is used up in giving spin and velocity to the samleer ball hence the rebound height is lower than what it hypothetically should have been?
My readings are very far off the elastic model i formulated, barely even following the trendline. How do i explain this?
 
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I think your observations are correct. :wink:

Unbalanced balls have an extremely "wonky" bounce. The lopsided impact causes rotation which absorbs much of the energy normally used in the rebound, plus the spin gives it a partially horizontal bounce rather than all vertical (which trades some height for distance).

If you want anything resembling accurate results, I'd say get more balls... :biggrin:

moo
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What causes this "wonky" bounce, alteration in a ball's aerodynamics?
How can I explain it assuming let's say I add 200 grams on the two opposite ends of a ball (x axis) but they arnt exactly aligned ... will the ball rotate around the y axis? Adding weights causes the spin because area of the body is proportional to air drift?
And why did the spin increase as heavier weights were placed onto the ball?
Does adding weights change the moment of inertia which ends up altering spin?
 
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When the ball impacts, the heavy side doesn't "stop" when the lighter side does, so the ball pivots a bit, and this continued movement by the heavier side translates into rotation.

If the ball is dropped from a good height then surface aerodynamics will also come into play, but I doubt it's a factor from a few feet unless you really have a large surface difference.

moo
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moo (moo') adj. Of no practical importance; irrelevant, such as a moo point (i.e. a cow's opinion).
 
Thanks moo .. really appreciated
 
You're welcome. :wink:

Btw, "wonky" is not a technical term... :biggrin:

moo
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moo (moo') adj. Of no practical importance; irrelevant, such as a moo point (i.e. a cow's opinion).
 
Would the center of mass change?
What about moment of inertia ?
How can I link the increase in the added mass to the spin of the ball?

For a full sphere, I = 2/5 m r2
By adding two bulk wieight on either side am i changing the value for alpha?
 
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