Litcius/Paper detail

Geometric Origin of the Tennis Racket Effect

Pavao Mardešić, G. J. Gutierrez Guillen, Léo Van Damme, Dominique Sugny

2020Physical Review Letters23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The tennis racket effect is a geometric phenomenon which occurs in a free rotation of a three-dimensional rigid body. In a complex phase space, we show that this effect originates from a pole of a Riemann surface and can be viewed as a result of the Picard-Lefschetz formula. We prove that a perfect twist of the racket is achieved in the limit of an ideal asymmetric object. We give upper and lower bounds to the twist defect for any rigid body, which reveals the robustness of the effect. A similar approach describes the Dzhanibekov effect in which a wing nut, spinning around its central axis, suddenly makes a half-turn flip around a perpendicular axis and the monster flip, an almost impossible skateboard trick.

Topics & Concepts

RacketTwistPhysicsRotation (mathematics)PerpendicularEuler anglesRigid bodyClassical mechanicsGeometryMathematicsSwingAcousticsSports Dynamics and BiomechanicsQuantum chaos and dynamical systemsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates