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Magnus Effect
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Magnus Effect
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Magnus-
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Magnus Effect
Explained
0:12
The Magnus effect in action. Named after Heinrich Gustav Magnus, this phenomenon is observable in a spinning object. As a ball moves through the air, its spin is moving against the flow of air on one side, towards the air on the other. So, the object drags air faster around one side, creating a difference in pressure that moves THE OBJECT in the direction of the lower-pressure side. Source: Pongfinity http://bit.ly/2LmkCyB | ABC Science
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Jun 5, 2018
Facebook
ABC Science
What ist the Magnus effect? | tec-science
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Backspin And The Magnus Effect! | Veritasium
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Veritasium
0:15
The Magnus effect is a physics phenomenon where a spinning object traveling through a fluid, such as air, experiences a force at a right angle to both its path and its axis of rotation. This happens because the spin changes how air flows around the object—speeding it up on one side and slowing it down on the other, leading to a pressure imbalance. This pressure difference causes the object to curve in flight, a motion often observed in sports like soccer, baseball, and tennis when a spinning bal
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11 months ago
Facebook
Inside History
0:22
The Magnus effect refers to the phenomenon where a spinning object moving through a fluid (like air or water) experiences a lateral force perpendicular to its direction of motion. This occurs due to the difference in pressure created on either side of the object. For example, in sports like soccer or baseball, when a ball is kicked or thrown with spin, it curves in the direction of the spin. The faster the spin and the greater the speed of the object, the more pronounced the effect. This princip
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MAGNUS EFFECT | PHYSICS| EXPERIMENTS |REAL LIFE EXAMPLE | SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY | FOOTBALL #physics
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YouTube
Science & Math Education Videos for All
0:19
@explaining._science on Instagram: "⚽ What is the Magnus Effect? The Magnus effect is the force that makes a spinning ball curve in the air. It happens when a ball spins and changes the air pressure around it, causing it to bend left, right, up, or down. 🌀 How it works Imagine a ball spinning while moving forward: ✔ Side where spin moves with the airflow The air moves faster → low pressure ✔ Side where spin moves against the airflow The air moves slower → high pressure 👉 Air moves from high pr
43.7K views
4 months ago
Instagram
explaining._science
0:31
Technology | Facts | Innovation on Instagram: "The Magnus Effect is the reason a spinning ball can suddenly curve, dip, or rise in mid-air - and it all comes down to how that spin changes the airflow around it. When an object spins, it drags air around its surface. On one side, the spin moves with the airflow, speeding it up. On the other side, the spin moves against the airflow, slowing it down. Fast-moving air creates lower pressure. Slow-moving air creates higher pressure. That difference pus
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4 months ago
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wtfactstechh
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