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cover of episode Climate Change + Baseball = More Home Runs

Climate Change + Baseball = More Home Runs

2025/3/25
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Short Wave

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Frederic Bertley
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Regina G. Barber
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Regina G. Barber: 我从小就对棒球很着迷,尤其对击球的声音和曲线球很感兴趣,也听说有些球场更容易打出全垒打。 我对棒球的热爱始于童年时期在圣地亚哥观看教士队比赛的经历。那时,我痴迷于球棒击中球的声音,仿佛能从中预判击球的质量和是否能上垒。曲线球也让我着迷,我不解投手是如何让球以那种方式旋转的。此外,我还听说有些球场更容易打出全垒打。 现在,我对棒球的理解已经超越了单纯的娱乐,我开始从科学的角度去分析比赛,这让我对这项运动有了更深刻的认识。 Frederic Bertley: 气候变化会影响棒球运动,例如导致球速加快和全垒打增多,因为温暖的空气密度更低,使得球飞行速度更快。温暖的空气密度低于冷空气,因此球在温暖的空气中飞行速度更快。气候变化导致空气变暖,球速加快,更容易打出全垒打。传统上,快速球更容易打出全垒打,因为球速越快,击球的反作用力越大,球飞得越远;但曲线球的旋转也会影响球的飞行轨迹。棒球运动遵循牛顿力学原理,球的飞行轨迹呈抛物线形状,击球角度会影响球的飞行距离。45度角击球能获得最远距离。棒球场地的尺寸不统一,不同球场的围墙高度和距离不同,这会影响全垒打的概率。主场优势球队更容易打出全垒打,因为他们熟悉本队球场的特点,例如波士顿红袜队熟悉芬威球场的“绿魔怪”围墙。棒球比赛的胜负取决于击球成功率,而不是全垒打数量。精准击球比偶尔打出全垒打更重要,因为比赛的胜利取决于得分,而得分是各种击球方式的结果。击球平均数代表了击球手在所有击球机会中成功击球并上垒的比例,这体现了击球手的精准度和稳定性。棒球运动的难度很高,因为击球手需要在极短的时间内判断并击中快速飞来的球,即使是三分之一的击球成功率也已经非常出色。棒球击球是基于经验、直觉和对投手的了解做出的“有根据的猜测”。

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Chapters
Warmer temperatures due to climate change lead to less dense air, resulting in faster pitches and longer home runs. This is because the ball travels faster through less dense air. The warmer the air, the faster the ball travels.
  • Warmer air is less dense than cold air.
  • Less dense air allows baseballs to travel faster.
  • Faster pitches lead to more home runs.

Shownotes Transcript

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Hey, short wavers. My favorite season starts this week. Baseball season.

As a kid, I loved the sound of the ball hitting the bat at the San Diego Padre games. I thought I could actually hear it when it was going to be a good hit and someone would be getting on base. I was also fascinated by curveballs. Like, how did the pitchers get those things to curve like that? And I had heard that there were stadiums that were easier to get home runs in.

Frederick Burtley was also fascinated by baseball as a kid, and he also loved science and math. And he would go on to get his Ph.D. in immunology. But when he was a kid, he loved rooting for his local pro baseball team, the Montreal Expos, which have since relocated to Washington, D.C. as the Nationals.

And he was inspired to try his hand at it, too. And I'm embarrassed to say this on national public radio. I was terrible. I couldn't hit the ball. Needless to say, he's not a pro baseball player now.

But he is the CEO and president of the Center of Science and Industry, or COSI, a science museum in Columbus, Ohio. And he loves spreading the wonder of science, especially when it intersects with sports. Did you know hockey players and figure skaters are literally gliding on a thin layer of water? A combination of pressure the blade puts on the ice and heat from friction of the blade going over the surface. He thinks making videos like these is one of the easiest ways to get sports fans into science.

It's a pursuit he feels very passionate about. When Dr. B, as he's known in his videos, watches baseball, he now sees it through a different lens. I can't watch any sport, especially baseball, without now looking at it through the scientific lens. There's physics, biochemistry, anatomy. And even engineering, all over that baseball diamond, throwing, hitting, running, wildcats.

Why are some people better at hitting home runs? And don't even get me started about math, because it's all about the box score and the analytics and mathematics. Now, the dynamics between all that science and the game are changing because of climate change. Today on the show, the science of baseball, from home runs to pitches and how climate change is affecting it all. I'm Regina Barber, and you're listening to ShoreWave, the science podcast from NPR. Hello.

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Okay, so Dr. B, climate change is affecting temperatures around the world, as we know. So more and more research is showing that climate change is actually causing both faster pitches and more home runs. What's the connection there? Dr. B, first of all, I'm just so excited to be talking to another Dr. B. And I'm super excited that you asked me that question because people talk about climate change. Some people think it's a thing. Some people don't think it's a thing. But most people don't think it affects them. But not only does it affect

climate and all kinds of things you can imagine, it actually impacts sports. And so the given city state will be warmer than what it used to be perhaps years prior. And warmer air actually has a significant impact on sports that involve projectiles like baseballs, soccer balls, et cetera. And in the case of baseball, the warm air,

actually allows the baseball to travel faster through that air. And one of the reasons why is warm air is actually less dense than cold air.

And so if you are playing baseball in a place that has warm air where the air is less dense, the speed of that pitch coming to you will come faster. And what comes in fast? Guess what? Goes out fast. So your capacity to hit the ball out the park metaphorically and literally is that much better with climate change because the air is warmer. The ball that you hit will travel faster and further. Okay. Speaking of home runs, what kind of pitch is needed for a home run to happen? Okay.

Right.

traditionally fast balls are better at triggering home runs. Why? The faster the ball comes to you, when you hit it, you know, with Newton's law, you're going to transfer in the exact opposite direction the ball is going to travel. And so the faster the ball comes to you, the better chance you have at hitting a home run. So that's number one. However, depending on certain curveballs and depending on how you actually hit the curveball, you can trigger certain

spinning of the ball through the air and that might make it carry it further upwards or further downwards. So but when we're talking about you know home runs it's not just like the fast pitch that you're going to need right to get that home run you also need the angle right like there's a specific way in which you can get a home run that the batter needs to do right.

Absolutely. The cool thing about sports, again, especially sports that involve balls, they really follow classic Newtonian mechanics. The kind of everyday physics we experience, speed, acceleration, collisions. And so whether you're taking a basketball shot from the foul line or anywhere in the court or hitting a baseball, the ball will travel in what we call that parabolic shape. So think of kind of an upside down U or a mountain-y shape. It's going to arc upwards. Then it's going to hit a specific height.

And because of gravity, it's going to slow up until it hits that height. And there's going to be a moment, a very, very fraction of a moment where it literally is going to be still in the air. Yep. And then it's going to follow the exact opposite path.

parabolic arched kind of flow right back down. So to your point, you can have a parabola that looks really steep. So if you imagine Mount Everest, you can have a parabola that's really shallow. Imagine a bunny hill and a ski slope, and you can have everything in between.

Well, if you're trying to get a ball from home plate by hitting it over the wall for a home run, you want to make sure you optimize the angle of where you hit the ball. Does it shoot off exactly at 45 degrees off the bat? That might be the best. And that also depends on a different field, which we may talk about that in a minute, different ballpark. But do you hit it and leave your bat at 45? Is it slightly shallower and it leaves your bat at 30 degrees? That will be optimized to get that ball off.

Right, because that 45-degree angle, that's going to get you the longest range, as we would say in a physics class. That's exactly right. Okay, so let's dwell on home runs, okay? Let's talk about those stadiums. I've heard that there are some stadiums that are easier to get home runs in, right? Is that true? Like, this is why I love baseball. It's such a peculiar sport, Dr. B. Almost every other sport on the planet has a standardized plan.

playing field. For some reason, in Major League Baseball, the field is not standardized. Yes, the distance from pitcher's mound to home plate is the same. Yes, the distance from home plate to first base, second base, third place, home plate, that's the same. But once you start going in the outer field, some of these walls are much shallower, but really tall. Some of these walls are much shorter, but

but they're a little further out. So people know that home field advantage teams have much better chances of hitting home runs. But spending a lot of time in Boston, we have the green monster and the green monster is super tall, but that's a lot closer. And so what happens is, you know, the Red Sox are used to smacking them either right near the top or sometimes they get it over. But then people who play in Boston who practice a lot in Fenway Park are

actually can learn to slightly pivot because the green monster isn't the entire outfield. It's just one side of it. So if you're used to being able to smack really well there and you can slightly shift and angle that ball to the other side, you have, by way of practice, an opportunity of being able to smack balls more in a home run fashion over that other wall because it's lower than the green monster.

This brings me actually to my question about precision, because I'm going to admit that I don't actually think home runs are that amazing. Games are won by hits, right? Not home runs. That's correct. Which brings me to the batting average, like one of the most famous baseball stats is

What does that batting average mean? It's so funny. And before, Dr. B, before we get to the batting average, which I love that question, I really want to talk about what you just said of precision hitting. Placing the ball in a precise manner, having it drop right between center and left field or right through the short time, that is an art.

art you know and a science and to your point the game is not won by home runs it's won by runs which are a consequence of hits however they come and so the precision batter is infinitely a more um threatening player than somebody who can just on occasion hit a home run right right so that batting average is just like out of all the times you're pitched the ball how many times you're hitting it and getting on base so it's it's the tortoise wins the race right the tortoise the

the precise tortoise with the indicators in their car changing lanes effectively will win the race. It's true. I mean, it makes me think of like my favorite hitter of all time, like Tony Gwynn. Well, and Ichiro too, Ichiro Suzuki. They're just, they're so precise, right? They know how to get hits.

Absolutely. And they have beautiful batting average numbers. Yeah. You know, this is one of the most beautiful things in sports. I mean, we know the concept of getting a test, right? If you got a 90 or 95, that was great. If you got a 60, that would be like, you know, okay, pass, but I'm just not feeling good. But in baseball...

Just to tell you how hard that sport is, there is nobody who's getting a 60% batting average. No, no. Right? There's nobody who's batting successfully one out of every two times a bat. No one's getting a 50%. If you bat 33% or you have an average of 333 or .33. That's amazing. You're successfully hitting one third of those balls. You have a multimillion dollar contract for the next 10 years. Yeah. Can you explain why it's so hard? Yeah.

to get a hit every, even every other time? Why is it so hard to even get it every three times? That pitcher, him or her, whoever, softball or baseball, they are throwing that ball so fast to you that you're not seeing it, eyeballing it, concentrating on it, and hitting it. You have to be swinging your bat literally the instant that pitcher has released the ball.

Because the time it takes your arm swing to swing that bat around is equivalent to the time it takes that ball to leave that pitcher and hit the catcher. So you're hitting the ball through experience, through intuition, through understanding and studying that athlete, that pitcher, and it's a best guess. It almost becomes, I don't want to say straight chance, obviously because some batters are better than others. They're educated guesses. So if you hit it one out of every three times,

You're great. It's like, imagine winning the lottery one out of every three times you played it.

Pretty darn good, right? Yeah. Well, Dr. B, thank you so much for talking with me about baseball. I had a wonderful time. Dr. B, I really appreciate you having me on the show. It's so exciting to know that an astrophysicist like yourself with a PhD understands the importance of celebrating the wonders of sports while paying homage to science.

and celebrating the wonders of science while appreciating the great American pastime. This has been an absolute pleasure. Oh, thank you so much. That is so thoughtful. And I just want the Padres to do well this season. You got it. I'll let my Expo slash Nationals now adopted Red Sox see how we do.

This episode was produced by Burleigh McCoy and Rachel Carlson. It was edited by our showrunner, Rebecca Ramirez, who also checked the facts. Patrick Murray was the audio engineer. I'm Regina Barber. Thank you for listening to Shortwave from NPR.

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