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Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ball on the racket's vibration node, more commonly known as the “sweet spot,” many players are unaware of the existence of a second, lesser-known location on the racket face, the center of percussion, that will also greatly diminish the strain on a player's arm when the ball is struck.
In order to understand the physics of this second sweet spot, it is helpful to consider what would happen to a tennis racket in the moments after impact with the ball if the player's hand were to vanish at the moment of impact. The impact of the ball would cause the racket to bounce backwards, experiencing a translational motion away from the ball. The tendency of this motion would be to jerk all parts of the racket, including the end of its handle, backward, or away from the ball. Unless the ball happened to hit the racket precisely at the racket's center of mass, the racket would additionally experience a rotational motion around its center of mass—much as a penny that has been struck near its edge will start to spin. Whenever the ball hits the racket face, the effect of this rotational motion will be to jerk the end of the handle forward, towards the ball. Depending on where the ball strikes the racket face, one or the other of these motions will predominate.
However, there is one point of impact, known as the center of percussion, which causes neither motion to predominate; if a ball were to strike this point, the impact would not impart any motion to the end of the handle. The reason for this lack of motion is that the force on the upper part of the hand would be equal and opposite to the force on the lower part of the hand, resulting in no net force on the tennis players’ hand or forearm. The center of percussion constitutes a second sweet spot because a tennis player's wrist typically is placed next to the end of the racket's handle. When the player strikes the ball at the center of percussion, her wrist is jerked neither forward nor backward, and she experiences a relatively smooth, comfortable tennis stroke.
The manner in which a tennis player can detect the center of percussion on a given tennis racket follows from the nature of this second sweet spot. The center of percussion can be located via simple trial and error by holding the end of a tennis racket between your finger and thumb and throwing a ball onto the strings. If the handle jumps out of your hand, then the ball has missed the center of percussion.
Question 1
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C
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E
Question Stats:
76% (02:34) correct
24% (01:32) wrong based on 51 sessions
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What is the primary message the author is trying to convey?
(A) A proposal for an improvement to the design of tennis rackets (B) An examination of the differences between the two types of sweet spot (C) A definition of the translational and rotational forces acting on a tennis racket (D) A description of the ideal area in which to strike every ball (E) An explanation of a lesser-known area on a tennis racket that dampens unwanted vibration
Question 2
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C
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E
Question Stats:
34% (01:37) correct
66% (02:17) wrong based on 44 sessions
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According to the passage, all of the following are true of the forces acting upon a tennis racket striking a ball EXCEPT
(A) the only way to eliminate the jolt that accompanies most strokes is to hit the ball on the center of percussion (B) the impact of the ball striking the racket can strain a tennis player's arm (C) there are at least two different forces acting upon the racket (D) the end of the handle of the racket will jerk forward after striking the ball unless the ball strikes the racket's center of mass (E) the racket will rebound after it strikes the ball
Question 3
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71% (00:39) correct
29% (00:47) wrong based on 49 sessions
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What is the primary function served by paragraph two in the context of the entire passage?
(A) To establish the main idea of the passage (B) To provide an explanation of the mechanics of the phenomenon discussed in the passage (C) To introduce a counterargument that elucidates the main idea of the passage (D) To provide an example of the primary subject described in the passage (E) To explain why the main idea of the passage would be useful for tennis players
Question 4
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Question Stats:
82% (00:43) correct
18% (00:50) wrong based on 38 sessions
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The author mentions “a penny that has been struck near its edge” in order to
(A) show how the center of mass causes the racket to spin (B) argue that a penny spins in the exact way that a tennis racket spins (C) explain how translational motion works (D) provide an illustration of a concept (E) demonstrate that pennies and tennis rackets do not spin in the same way
Question 5
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Question Stats:
67% (01:11) correct
33% (02:11) wrong based on 39 sessions
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Which of the following can be inferred from the passage?
(A) If a player holds the tennis racket anywhere other than the end of the handle, the player will experience a jolting sensation. (B) The primary sweet spot is more effective at damping vibration than is the secondary sweet spot. (C) Striking a tennis ball at a spot other than the center of percussion can result in a jarring feeling. (D) Striking a tennis ball repeatedly at spots other than a sweet spot leads to “tennis elbow.” (E) If a player lets go of the racket at the moment of impact, the simultaneous forward and backward impetus causes the racket to drop straight to the ground.
Question 6
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Is your answer correct? Yes No Not Sure
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Select the sentence in the second or third paragraph that describes the physics of the center of percussion's perceived “sweetness”
The reason for this lack of motion is that the force on the upper part of the hand would be equal and opposite to the force on the lower part of the hand, resulting in no net force on the tennis players’ hand or forearm
Question 7
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C
Question Stats:
56% (00:38) correct
44% (00:45) wrong based on 34 sessions
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Consider each of the choices separately and select all that apply.
It can be inferred that a tennis ball that strikes a racket's center of percussion will do which of the following?
A) Cause the racket to bounce backwards B) Not cause the wrist to jerk C) Allow for a cleaner stroke than a ball striking a racket's primary sweet spot
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
09 Nov 2018, 11:16
I have a question about the last question.
I picked B only. (Not cause the wrist to jerk)
I did not pick C. (Allow for a cleaner stroke than a ball striking a racket's primary sweet spot)
This is because I didn't see sentence that says that hitting the center of percussion gives a cleaner stroke than the vibration node.
The only sentence on this that I saw was: When the player strikes the ball at the center of percussion, her wrist is jerked neither forward nor backward, and she experiences a relatively smooth, comfortable tennis stroke.
So there is no comparison. The word "relatively" is not specifically used to compare it to the vibration node. Relatively here is used more to mean "more than in usual circumstances."
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
11 Nov 2018, 10:48
Expert Reply
Quote:
The center of percussion constitutes a second sweet spot because a tennis player's wrist typically is placed next to the end of the racket's handle. When the player strikes the ball at the center of percussion, her wrist is jerked neither forward nor backward, and she experiences a relatively smooth, comfortable tennis stroke.
From this, you could certainly infer that C is correct. However, the passage nowhere is mentioned a comparison between a ball that hits the primary and secondary sweet spot.
In this is a bit confusing the formulation of C. Notwithstanding, C is correct.
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
12 Nov 2018, 12:32
Carcass wrote:
Quote:
The center of percussion constitutes a second sweet spot because a tennis player's wrist typically is placed next to the end of the racket's handle. When the player strikes the ball at the center of percussion, her wrist is jerked neither forward nor backward, and she experiences a relatively smooth, comfortable tennis stroke.
From this, you could certainly infer that C is correct. However, the passage nowhere is mentioned a comparison between a ball that hits the primary and secondary sweet spot.
In this is a bit confusing the formulation of C. Notwithstanding, C is correct.
Regards
Thank you for your feedback. I'm still confused by C but you win some and let others go.
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
12 Aug 2019, 05:24
I have question with the fifth question. The answer choice of this is C--(C) Striking a tennis ball at a spot other than the center of percussion can result in a jarring feeling. Then how about the sweet spot referred in the first paragraph? thanks
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
31 Aug 2019, 07:44
Question 2, Option D: the end of the handle of the racket will jerk forward after striking the ball unless the ball strikes the racket's center of mass
I believe that this option is wrong (and so is an answer as well) because of the following statement from para 2:
Quote:
Depending on where the ball strikes the racket face, one or the other of these motions will predominate.
The end of the handle may not jerk forward even if the ball does not strike the racket's centre of mass. The quote says that the premoninance of the motion will depend on where on the racket face the ball hits. There are spots on the racket face other than centre of percussion and centre of mass obviously. We don't know what might happen there.
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
01 Sep 2019, 18:50
Could someone explain why the answer to the second question is (C)? I thought it was made clear that hitting the ball at COP reduces jerk. option (D) because COM talks about rotational motion alone. COM = no rotation; no COM = rotation, nothing about handle being jerked.
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
02 Sep 2019, 09:36
addy123 wrote:
Could someone explain why the answer to the second question is (C)? I thought it was made clear that hitting the ball at COP reduces jerk. option (D) because COM talks about rotational motion alone. COM = no rotation; no COM = rotation, nothing about handle being jerked.
Second question's answer is (A). What are you talking about?
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
02 Sep 2019, 23:54
I have question with the fifth question. The answer choice of this is C--(C) Striking a tennis ball at a spot other than the center of percussion can result in a jarring feeling. Then how about the sweet spot referred in the first paragraph?
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
03 Sep 2019, 07:50
Expert Reply
Guys please, this post is turning a bit in a mess.
When you read and do not understand a question start always from which is the OA and then ask for the answer/s you do not understand. Otherwise, I get lost in helping you.
Now, for the second question, the question itself is an EXCEPT question, which means that ALL the answer choices are mentioned in the passage and so correct but one which is NOT clearly or as an inference choice in the passage. It is completely OFF. Therefore, it is the right answer.
Be careful before to jump to the conclusion which is right and which is wrong. Read the stem carefully.
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
16 Feb 2021, 18:29
Carcass - I know this is an older question, but could you please help me out with question 5?
Answer is C - "(C) Striking a tennis ball at a spot other than the center of percussion can result in a jarring feeling."
However based on discussion in the passage, there are 2 spots where one doesn't experience any vibrations. The traditional sweet spot and the center of percussion. The statement above implies that only it is only the "center of percussion" that prevents vibrations.
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba
[#permalink]
17 Feb 2021, 10:36
Expert Reply
Not true what you said
Your statement
(C) Striking a tennis ball at a spot other than the center of percussion can result in a jarring feeling.
The statement above implies that only it is only the "center of percussion" that prevents vibrations.
The passage does not mention that ONLY if you hit the sweet spot - center of percussion you do not have vibrations AT ALL, and in other spots YEs or maybe.
Quote:
When the player strikes the ball at the center of percussion, her wrist is jerked neither forward nor backward, and she experiences a [u]relatively smooth[u], comfortable tennis stroke.
relatively smooth means that even at the center of percussion you can experience some sort of vibration and it is also true the other way around: in other spots, you can have NO vibrations or just a few and have some sort of comfort hitting the tennis ball
Thanks for your post. I apologize, I'm not sure I fully understand what you wrote. The quote in my previous post is the quote from the correct answer choice, it wasn't my statement.
quote from passage,
Quote:
The reason for this lack of motion is that the force on the upper part of the hand would be equal and opposite to the force on the lower part of the hand, resulting in no net force on the tennis players’ hand or forearm. The center of percussion constitutes a second sweet spot because a tennis player's wrist typically is placed next to the end of the racket's handle.
This "no net force" = no jarring feeling is what I inferred. Additionally this section says, center of percussion is a second sweet spot
Thus from what I gather, the actual answer - Choice C (question 5) doesn't exactly fit into this sentence, because it says "other than the center of percussion" that implies this is the only spot one on the racket.
quote from answer choice,
Quote:
Striking a tennis ball at a spot other than the center of percussion can result in a jarring feeling.
Now if this answer was reworded as follows, I would have definitely picked C. Striking a tennis ball at a spot other than the sweet spot and center of percussion can result in a jarring feeling.
Thank you again for posting detailed replies, I truly appreciate the effort you are putting into this forum !
gmatclubot
Re: Though most tennis players generally strive to strike the ba [#permalink]