View Full Version : Science Qs
Greg Farr
March 25th 08, 04:28 AM
Just saw a commercial with a guy hitting a golf ball towards Earth;
Question; How far could the ball travel, with 1/7th gravity? W hould
something like that achieve escape velocity?
Greg
http://gregsplace.50megs.com
John Szalay
March 25th 08, 05:57 PM
Greg Farr > wrote in
:
> Just saw a commercial with a guy hitting a golf ball towards Earth;
> Question; How far could the ball travel, with 1/7th gravity? W hould
> something like that achieve escape velocity?
>
> Greg
> http://gregsplace.50megs.com
>
Believe that is answered somewhere on the NASA website.
since 2 golf balls were really hit on the moon..
William R. Thompson
April 1st 08, 12:39 PM
"Greg Farr" wrote:
> Just saw a commercial with a guy hitting a golf ball towards Earth;
> Question; How far could the ball travel, with 1/7th gravity? Would
> something like that achieve escape velocity?
I assume this is on the moon, where the gravity is 1/6 that of earth.
You can hit a golf ball at approximately 70 m/sec, maximum.
According to the "Design Guide to Orbital Flight" circular orbital
velocity at lunar surface level is 1679 m/sec, and escape velocity
is 2374 m/sec. The golf ball comes nowhere near those velocities.
If you hit the ball for maximum range, the ball will travel about
3000 meters. That assumes you can hit the ball that hard--a
spacesuit will really hamper your swing, as Al Shepard learned.
--Bill Thompson
Greg Farr
April 3rd 08, 08:11 AM
On Tue, 25 Mar 2008 18:27:11 -0400, "Bruce R" >
wrote:
>
>"Greg Farr" > wrote in message
...
>> Just saw a commercial with a guy hitting a golf ball towards Earth;
>> Question; How far could the ball travel, with 1/7th gravity? W hould
>> something like that achieve escape velocity?
>>
>> Greg
>> http://gregsplace.50megs.com
>
>Now I'm not a great math wizard or anything, but if you figure it logically,
>gravity on earth pulls downward at 9.8 meters per second squared. So if the
>moon is 1/7 earth gravity, take the 9.8 mps and divide it by 7 and you get
>1.4 meters per second squared. A squarely smacked golf ball would exceed
>this but you have to remember that even though weaker, the gravity would act
>upon it all the way up to the point where earth's gravity would exert more
>force (free return trajectory). So you could launch it into space with a
>good smack, but it would eventually fall back to the moon because I doubty
>even Tiger Woods could hit it with enough force to get it to the free return
>point.. I'm sure that some really smart folks at NASA could tell you the
>specifics of just how long that would take, but suffice to say that at some
>point, it's coming back to the moon.
>
>Bruce
>
Yes, makes perfect sense, thank you for figuring it out for us.
Greg
http://gregsplace.50megs.com
Greg Farr
April 3rd 08, 08:16 AM
On Tue, 1 Apr 2008 05:39:16 -0600, "William R. Thompson"
> wrote:
>"Greg Farr" wrote:
>
>> Just saw a commercial with a guy hitting a golf ball towards Earth;
>> Question; How far could the ball travel, with 1/7th gravity? Would
>> something like that achieve escape velocity?
>
>I assume this is on the moon, where the gravity is 1/6 that of earth.
>
>You can hit a golf ball at approximately 70 m/sec, maximum.
>According to the "Design Guide to Orbital Flight" circular orbital
>velocity at lunar surface level is 1679 m/sec, and escape velocity
>is 2374 m/sec. The golf ball comes nowhere near those velocities.
>
>If you hit the ball for maximum range, the ball will travel about
>3000 meters. That assumes you can hit the ball that hard--a
>spacesuit will really hamper your swing, as Al Shepard learned.
>
>--Bill Thompson
Maybe if you got together with Bruce R, you might get a diff outcome,
don't really know who's right. Thanks
Greg
http://gregsplace.50megs.com
vBulletin® v3.6.4, Copyright ©2000-2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.