“Note that the ball falls at a rather large angle at the end of its flight; the trajectories are not symmetric.”
Source: The Physics Of Baseball (Second Edition - Revised), Chapter 2, The Flight Of The baseball, p. 15
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Robert Adair (physicist)11
Physicist and author 1924Related quotes
Pierre Louis Maupertuis (1698–1759) French mathematician, philosopher and man of letters
Accord de différentes loix de la nature qui avoient jusqu’ici paru incompatibles (1744)
Robert Adair (physicist) (1924) Physicist and author
Source: The Physics Of Baseball (Second Edition - Revised), Chapter 1, Models And Their Limitations, p. 1
David Attenborough (1926) British broadcaster and naturalist
"The Mastery of Flight"
The Life of Birds (1998)
Vitruvius book De architectura
Source: De architectura (The Ten Books On Architecture) (~ 15BC), Book I, Chapter V, Sec. 2
Banesh Hoffmann (1906–1986) American mathematician and physicist
[Banesh Hoffmann, The strange story of the quantum: an account for the general reader of the growth of the ideas underlying our present atomic knowledge, Courier Dover Publications, 1959, 0486205185, 7]
Paul Ormerod book The Death of Economics
Part I, Chapter 5, Mechanistic Modelling, p. 108
The Death of Economics (1994)
“The wheel of Fortune tourneth as a ball;
Sodeyn clymbyng axeth a sodeyn fall.”
John Lydgate (1370–1450) monk and poet
Bk. 9, line 1211.
The Fall of Princes
Aubrey Beardsley (1872–1898) English illustrator and author
From an interview in the newspaper To-Day (1894), as quoted in Aubrey Beardsley : A Biography (1999) by Matthew Sturgis, p. 200
Context: All humanity inspires me. Every passer-by is my unconscious sitter; and as strange as it may seem, I really draw folk as I see them. Surely it is not my fault that they fall into certain lines and angles.