Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

The physics of golf

REVIEW ARTICLE

A Raymond Penner

Show affiliations


An overview of the application of physics to the game of golf is given. The golf swing is modelled as a double pendulum. This model and its variations have been used extensively by researchers in determining the effect that various swing parameters have on clubhead speed. These results as well as examples of three-link models are discussed. Kinematic and kinetic measurements taken on the recorded downswings of golfers as well as force measurements are reviewed. These measurements highlight differences between the swings of skilled and unskilled golfers.

Several aspects of the behaviour of a golf ball are examined. Measurements and models of the impact of golf balls with barriers are reviewed. Such measurements have allowed researchers to determine the effect that different golf ball constructions have on their launch parameters. The launch parameters determine not only the length of the golf shot but also the behaviour of the golf ball on impact with the turf. The effect of dimples on the aerodynamics of a golf ball and the length of the golf shot is discussed. Models of the bounce and roll of a golf ball after impact with the turf as well as models of the motion of a putted ball are presented.

Researchers have measured and modelled the behaviour of both the shaft and the clubhead during the downswing and at impact. The effect that clubhead mass and loft as well as the shaft length and mass have on the length of a golf shot are considered. Models and measurements of the flexing of the shaft as well as research into the flexing of the clubface and the effects of its surface roughness are presented. An important consideration in clubhead design is its behaviour during off-centre impacts. In line with this, the effects that the curvature of a clubface and the moments of inertia of the clubhead have on the launch parameters and trajectory of an off-centred impacted golf ball are examined.


PACS

02.50.Le Decision theory and game theory

47.85.Gj Aerodynamics

07.10.Pz Instruments for strain, force, and torque

45.40.-f Dynamics and kinematics of rigid bodies

Subjects

Fluid dynamics

Mathematical physics

Computational physics

Instrumentation and measurement

Dates

Issue 2 (February 2003)

Received 31 October 2002

Published 20 December 2002



  1. The physics of golf

    A Raymond Penner 2003 Rep. Prog. Phys. 66 131

  2. Predictability in the large: an extension of the concept of Lyapunov exponent

    E Aurell et al 1997 J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 30 1

  3. Analysis of valveless micropumps with inertial effects

    L S Pan et al 2003 J. Micromech. Microeng. 13 390

  4. Morse index and causal continuity. A criterion for topology change in quantum gravity

    H F Dowker et al 2000 Class. Quantum Grav. 17 697

  5. Digging up the past: modelling resistive surveys

    Bob Kibble 2004 Phys. Educ. 39 177

  6. Solvable coupled Hamiltonian for a periodic potential

    Frank Szmulowicz 2004 Eur. J. Phys. 25 569

  7. Design of a light stimulator for fetal and neonatal magnetoencephalography

    J D Wilson et al 2009 Physiol. Meas. 30 N1

  8. Improvements to the NIST network time protocol servers

    Judah Levine 2008 Metrologia 45 S12

  9. Cavity ring down spectroscopy experiment for an advanced undergraduate laboratory

    T Stacewicz et al 2007 Eur. J. Phys. 28 789

  10. Characteristic wave velocities in spherical electromagnetic cloaks

    A D Yaghjian et al 2009 New J. Phys. 11 113011

Users also read

What's this?
This innovative new feature generates a list of articles 'also read' by other users based on them reading the original article. Article abstracts citations and references are all considered and weighted accordingly. We hope that this will help you find relevant papers for your research.

  1. Financial physics

View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.