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/sci/ - Science & Math


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2127695 No.2127695 [Reply] [Original]

So, we all know that when you heat up a mothafuckin' squash ball, the air inside goes nuts and pressure goes up, assuming the rubber does not expand. So, heat and pressure can be linked, and pressure and the bounce of a ball will increase from a drop height with pressure, but does any existing equation actually link pressure and how high the fucker bounces from rest? I major in math, so I wouldn't know much beyond this in physics. Thanks, /sci/!

>> No.2127976
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2127976

bump with gaga

>> No.2128096
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2128096

>I major in math
>1) major in math
>2) math
sage.

pressure = volume * sin(height) btw

>> No.2128110

I do physics shit outside of math studies. thanks a lot buddy. So the height is just arcsin(p/V) ?

>> No.2128122

sorry, I meant arccot(ln(p)) = sqrt(mod((e^ivsinH)^2))

>> No.2128164

bump for interest