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Dribble quibble: experiments find that new basketball gets slick.


A dispute in professional basketball about a new ball has bounced its way into a physics lab. A study launched last month at the University of Texas at Arlington For other system schools, see University of Texas System.

History
Established in 1895 as Arlington College, it was renamed Carlisle Military Academy (1902), Arlington Training School (1913), and Arlington Military Academy (1916).
 compares a controversial plastic ball introduced in preseason games this summer by the National Basketball Association National Basketball Association (NBA)

U.S. professional basketball league. It was formed in 1949 by the merger of two rival organizations, the National Basketball League (founded 1937) and the Basketball Association of America (1946).
 (NBA NBA
abbr.
1. National Basketball Association

2. National Boxing Association

NBA (US) n abbr (= National Basketball Association) → Basketball-Dachverband (=
) with the previous standard--a leather-covered ball. The official basketball season, the first in which the new ball will be used, began this week.

So far, the Texas experiments indicate that the new ball bounces less elastically, veers more when it bounces, and becomes more slippery when damp than does the official leather ball of the past 35 years.

Many NBA players have griped about the new ball since teams began using it.

"The most significant finding is the slickness of the ball," says University of Texas physicist James L. Horwitz. He, physicist Kaushik De, and their colleagues gauged friction for both new and old balls by sliding each along sheets of silicon. That material's coefficient of friction coefficient of friction
n. pl. coefficients of friction
The ratio of the force that maintains contact between an object and a surface and the frictional force that resists the motion of the object.
 is approximately that of the human palm, the scientists say.

The plastic balls, when dry, resisted sliding much more strongly than their leather counterparts did. Yet a single drop of a commercial eyewash eye·wash
n.
A soothing solution for bathing or medicating the eye.
, chosen to simulate sweat, slashed the plastic ball's coefficient of friction by 55 percent, the scientists claim. In contrast, leather balls gradually increased their friction coefficients when wetted--to a maximum of about 130 percent of the figure for a dry leather ball.

"When the balls are dry, the synthetic ball is easier to grip, and when they're wet, the leather one is much easier to grip" Horwitz says. The scientists also found that leather balls absorb moisture about eight times as fast as the plastic balls do.

Spalding, the Springfield, Mass., manufacturer of both the new and old balls, claims that its tests throughout the design process produced different results. "The new composite [plastic] balls' coefficient of friction outperformed the leather balls' coefficient of friction in both wet and dry conditions," says mechanical engineer Ron Laliberty, Spalding's director of new-product development.

John J. Fontanella, a former college basketball College basketball most often refers to the American basketball competitive governance structure established by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, or NCAA. History
Further information: NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship records
 player and now a physicist at the United States Naval Academy United States Naval Academy, at Annapolis, Md.; for training young men and women to be officers of the U.S. navy or marine corps. George Bancroft, Secretary of the Navy, founded and opened (1845) it as the Naval School at Annapolis.  in Annapolis, Md., calls the Texas work "impressive."

"The NBA should stick with the leather basketball for another year," he advises. That would give the manufacturer time to develop a better plastic cover material. A new book by Fontanella on basketball physics comes out this month.

The Texas researchers are doing their study--for free--at the behest of Mark Cuban Mark Cuban (born July 31, 1958 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)[1] is an American billionaire entrepreneur.[2] He is the owner of the Dallas Mavericks, an NBA franchise[3] and Chairman of HDNet, an HDTV cable network. , owner of the Dallas Mavericks The introduction of this article is too short.
To comply with Wikipedia's lead section guidelines, it should be expanded.
, an NBA team. He posted the preliminary test results online on Oct. 27 (http://www. blogmaverick.com/2006/10/27/nba-balls/).

In response to the findings, Cuban says that remedial steps are needed. These include frequent ball changes during games and perhaps a redesign of the cover once the current season ends.
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Article Details
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Author:Weiss, P.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 4, 2006
Words:471
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