Abstract

Soccer balls such as the Adidas Roteiro that have been used in soccer tournaments thus far had 32 pentagonal and hexagonal panels. Recently, the Adidas Teamgeist II and Adidas Jabulani, respectively having 14 and 8 panels, have been used at tournaments; the aerodynamic characteristics of these balls have not yet been verified. Now, the Adidas Tango 12, having 32 panels, has been developed for use at tournaments; therefore, it is necessary to understand its aerodynamic characteristics. Through a wind tunnel test and ball trajectory simulations, this study shows that the aerodynamic resistance of the new 32-panel soccer ball is larger in the high-speed region and lower in the middle-speed region than that of the previous 14- and 8-panel balls. The critical Reynolds number of the Roteiro, Teamgeist II, Jabulani, and Tango 12 was ~2.2 × 105 (drag coefficient, Cd ≈ 0.12), ~2.8 × 105 (Cd ≈ 0.13), ~3.3 × 105 (Cd ≈ 0.13), and ~2.4 × 105 (Cd ≈ 0.15), respectively. The flight trajectory simulation suggested that the Tango 12, one of the newest soccer balls, has less air resistance in the medium-speed region than the Jabulani and can thus easily acquire large initial velocity in this region. It is considered that the critical Reynolds number of a soccer ball, as considered within the scope of this experiment, depends on the extended total distance of the panel bonds rather than the small designs on the panel surfaces.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/2193-1801-2-171) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Following Thompson’s (1910) pioneering study of golf balls, studies of the aerodynamic characteristics of golf balls have focused on their drag coefficient (Cd) values and their dimpled shapes (Bearman and Harvey 1976; Davies 1949; Smits and Ogg 2004)

  • We conducted a steady-state analysis of the newest soccer ball—the Adidas Tango 12 (32 panels)—and conventional soccer balls—the Adidas Roteiro (32 panels), Adidas Teamgeist II (14 panels), and Adidas Jabulani (8 panels)—through a wind tunnel experiment, and we clarified the drag coefficient and critical Reynolds number

  • This study aims to clarify the drag coefficient and critical Reynolds number of the newest soccer ball—the Adidas Tango 12 (32 panels)—and conventional soccer balls—the Adidas Roteiro (32 panels), Adidas Teamgeist II (14 panels), and Adidas Jabulani (8 panels)—through a wind tunnel experiment

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Following Thompson’s (1910) pioneering study of golf balls, studies of the aerodynamic characteristics of golf balls have focused on their drag coefficient (Cd) values and their dimpled shapes (Bearman and Harvey 1976; Davies 1949; Smits and Ogg 2004). Previous studies of the aerodynamic characteristics of soccer balls have focused on traditional 32-panel balls such as the Adidas Roteiro, where each panel is a pentagon or a hexagon (Bray and Kerwin 2003; Asai et al 2007; Goff and Carré 2009). We conducted a steady-state analysis of the newest soccer ball—the Adidas Tango 12 (32 panels)—and conventional soccer balls—the Adidas Roteiro (32 panels), Adidas Teamgeist II (14 panels), and Adidas Jabulani (8 panels)—through a wind tunnel experiment, and we clarified the drag coefficient and critical Reynolds number. The relationship between the critical Reynolds number and the extended total distances of the panel bonds of the soccer balls was examined, and the two were shown to have a high degree of correlation

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.