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NFL Asks Columbia University For Help With Deflate-Gate 239

An anonymous reader writes with news that the NFL has reached out for some help answering the questions raised by deflate-gate. "Yep, it's for real. The law firm representing the NFL (Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison) has reached out to Columbia University's department of physics to recruit an expert on 'gas physics' to help determine, as has been reported, the 'environmental impacts on inflated footballs.' This is one of those rare times when the jocks turn to the nerds, so fellow fans of molecules and momentum — climb out of that gym locker you were stuffed into — this is our moment. Stand tall. And do the wave....They want to talk to a physicist, I presume, to help determine if a drop in temperature — a slowing of the air molecules inside the football — can explain the low pressure that was found in some of the balls used in the A.F.C. championship game two weeks ago between the New England Patriots and the Indianapolis Colts."
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NFL Asks Columbia University For Help With Deflate-Gate

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  • by Jaime2 ( 824950 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @01:49PM (#48952689)
    The problem with describing what happens when a ball cools isn't about the gas inside it; that's well understood. The problem is that the container is also affected by temperature and leather is a complicated material. The best answer here is to do a bunch of experiments, not a bunch of calculations.
    • by CanadianRealist ( 1258974 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @02:10PM (#48952863)
      The behaviour of the gas is described nicely by the ideal gas law: [wikipedia.org] PV/T is constant, where P is the pressure of the gas, V is the volume and T is the temperature. (T must use a scale relative to absolute zero.)

      The best answer here is to do a bunch of experiments, not a bunch of calculations.

      The NFL has plenty of experience in dealing with inflating footballs. It's pretty hard to believe that they don't understand what's going on. They should be well aware of the effects of cooling on both the ball and the air inside it. It's not like they recently started using inflated leather balls.

      • by Jaime2 ( 824950 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @02:16PM (#48952903)

        So, I said that the behavior of gasses is well understood and you responded with the ideal gas law. Are you agreeing or disagreeing with me? If you are agreeing, then why post?

        Next you mentioned the the NFL has a bunch of experience with this. Yet, it is the NFL that is asking for help. Obviously they don't agree with you.

        • i solved this issue on day one. they injected hot gas into the football right before the pressure was measured. pressure was fine with the hot gas, but once the gas reached ambient temperature the pressure was lower. Using the ideal gas law I calculated the gas would need to be 30 C (about 55 F) hotter than ambient. Completely feasible.

          science, bitches!

          • i solved this issue on day one. they injected hot gas into the football right before the pressure was measured. pressure was fine with the hot gas, but once the gas reached ambient temperature the pressure was lower. Using the ideal gas law I calculated the gas would need to be 30 C (about 55 F) hotter than ambient. Completely feasible.

            science, bitches!

            I'm willing to bet that you used 2 PSI in your calculations as that is what was initially leaked as the pressure difference for all of the footballs. There have been further leaks saying that only the intercepted ball, the one in possession of the Colts, was 2 PSI low. The rest were supposedly under 1 PSI low.
            http://www.businessinsider.com... [businessinsider.com]

            Based on the information from Billichick, it's likely that at least one of the footballs, if not more, were roughed up (which is what they do the prepare the football

            • the problem is, with the rubber bladder and then the leather outside, the football won't feel noticeably warmer immediately

        • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 01, 2015 @03:07PM (#48953285)

          The NFL is not interested in a scientific answer. They are interested in an answer from a supposed authority which reaches a conclusion they agree with. The NFL can then take that answer and champion it as having been "verified by scientists!".

          The NFL wants this whole mess to go away. They do not want people thinking that the players and teams cheat because people will become less invested in a rigged game. And if that happens, the NFL makes less money.

          What the NFL is really asking is for some scientist to come forward with an explanation about how the Patriot's footballs can be slightly deflated while the other team's balls remained pert and bouncy. Whether the scientist involved provides a legitimate answer or not is inconsequential, so long as it sounds convincing.

          So, yeah, once again the jocks are trying to crib off the hard work of the nerds.

        • Yes we all know about PV=nRT. But it's not just the pressure P and T that are changing in the equation. Why not also consider the rubber bladder, leather and stiched seams. Rubber and other un-oriented polymers Expand when chilled. the stitching threads are oriented to they should compress when chilled. My guess is the leather will expand too. So the pressure could drop just from the ball's volume increasing not just a constant.

          Finally no one seems to consider an even easier way the balls could get de

      • by Ambassador Kosh ( 18352 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @02:31PM (#48953001)

        Air is NOT an ideal gas at ALL. You can't use the ideal gas law and have it work.

        However you are in luck though since engineers made tables long ago of air properties at a huge range of temperatures, pressures etc and you can just look up the properties of air. However the properties of the material of the football would have to be tested.

        The only time you can use the ideal gas law is with a nearly pure gas at high temperature and no chemical reactions.

        It does suck that so much of the stuff we teach people in chemistry is not actually useful.

        • Dry air behaves ideally until several atmospheres at reduced temperatures well above one, we're talking about 2 atmospheres. Ideal assumption would be fine unless there is humidity. If there is humidity in the air, it gets a little more complicated; you'd have to subtract out the vapor fraction that may condense.

        • The ideal gas law is useable at all temperatures, except you consider 30 degrees Kelvin a high temperature.

          The properties of the hull, in this case the skin of the ball are irrelevant. The 'volume' of the skin is the thickness times area. It is related to the enclosed volume inside of the skin by a factor of r^3.

          So sinking temperature lets first of all shrink the volume of the skin and not the volume of the sphere it surrounds.

          Actually a no brainer if you ever had held a ball used for sports in your hands.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by ember42 ( 202034 )

          Dry air is within 1 part in 1000 of the ideal gas law at near ambient pressure and temperature. I challenge you to detect this with portable instrumentation.
          http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C... [wikipedia.org]
          Unless the football is extremely elastic or is strongly adsorbent of gasses the ball properties wont matter much at all.
          The interesting question is do they use dry air? If they use ambient air, compressing it to ~13 psi will increase the dew point by ~10C / 18F. If the dew point is now above ambient, moisture will cond

        • by sd4f ( 1891894 )
          I was taught that you treat "air" as an ideal gas when there's no phase change. This was thermodynamics though. There may be an issue with humidity, but I have my doubts whether that will play a large role.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by easyTree ( 1042254 )

      The best answer here is to do a bunch of experiments

      Yes, let's fire balls at jocks' heads and see what the effect of varying the environmental parameters is.

  • Commercial test labs do this type of work on a daily basis. Not rocked sciense, so don't know what a University offers.

    • Not rocked sciense, so don't know what a University offers.

      Lot's of underpaid grad students = low consulting fees.

    • Not rocked sciense, so don't know what a University offers.

      Maybe they can find someone who can spell "rocket science"....

      • by The Rizz ( 1319 )

        Hey, /. commentators don't necessarily know how to spell things right. We aren't all rocket surgeons!

        • by pspahn ( 1175617 )
          What do sturgeons have to do with it? Have you ever caught one? They're pretty gnarly fish, aren't they?
          • by The Rizz ( 1319 )

            You've got it all wrong. Tree branches are gnarly, not fish.

            • by grcumb ( 781340 )

              You've got it all wrong. Tree branches are gnarly, not fish.

              He meant narwhally. Which is still not fish, but closer.

    • I doubt there are commericial test labs that test no brainers.

      Customer: "Dude, if we put this kettle of water on a flame of gas, would it become warmer?"

      Tester: "No idea, but we can set up a test environment and do some tests! Wanna pay for it?"

  • Every 9-year-old kid who plays basketball outside in winter can tell the NFL that temperature affects air pressure [yahoo.com]. Whether this is the sole factor at work here, is another question.

    • by itzly ( 3699663 )

      The fact that warm air expands is well known. The question is whether this is actually a possible explanation for the observed facts.

  • by DougF ( 1117261 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @01:56PM (#48952745)
    ...why the other team's game balls remained properly inflated...given they were undergoing similar circumstances (weather, handling, use, etc).
    • by Reverberant ( 303566 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @02:08PM (#48952851) Homepage

      why the other team's game balls remained properly inflated...given they were undergoing similar circumstances (weather, handling, use, etc).

      Properly inflated /= experienced no deflation. The Colt's footballs could have experienced deflation and still met the 12.5 psi limit if they were inflated at the high-end of the range to start. This of course assumes that the leaks regarding the Colts footballs are correct, the initial report of 11/12 Pats game balls being 2 psi under the limit have been contradicted by the repots, including a report this morning that only 1 ball was 2 psi under the lime (the ball handled by the Colts' staff), a few balls were about 1 psi under the limit, and the rest were just a "tic" below 12.5 psi.

      They also weren't necessarily undergoing similar circumstances" - the Pats' balls were used more and it could be that the Colts (as a dome team) were more concerned about keeping the balls dry than the Patriots were (homer speculation on my part).

    • by The Rizz ( 1319 )

      That depends. Were they both inflated under the same conditions, too? Maybe the "under-inflated" balls were inflated with warm air indoors, and the "properly inflated" balls had been inflated outside in the cold air. Or were they even just inflated an hour apart in changing weather conditions?

  • I'm not a football fan but one cannot avoid hearing about "deflategate"

    However my understanding is that they both measure the pressure and the weight of the ball. The temperature difference will account for the pressure decrease however the balls should still weigh the same. The claims were what - 11 of the balls were underweight?

    • by Jaime2 ( 824950 )
      There is about 1/10th of a pound of air in an inflated ball. If it were pumped to 100psi you could tell the difference, but you would need balls with very consistent tare weights and a really good scale to notice a few psi in the weight.
    • The claim is that 11 out of the 12 footballs provided by New England were deflated AFTER they had been checked by the NFL officials.

      A few hours before the game starts, the officials check the footballs provided by both teams to make sure they are properly inflated. (Proper inflation is between 12.5 and 13.5 PSI.)

      The footballs are then held by the officials until prior to the game, where they are handed over to the equipment managers for each team to take to that team's sideline area.

      Now, at halftime, the of

      • Some methods of pressure testing might cause a little air loss, maybe the NFL officials themselves are responsible for the missing air.
      • by pspahn ( 1175617 )

        Interrogator: Sir, you contend that you did not knowingly inflate those footballs with heated air?

        Equipment Manager: Well, I didn't know it would be a problem. I always wondered why our air compressor was hooked up to the furnace.

      • Besides the "ideal gas law, of PV =nRT" [wikipedia.org], the act of checking the pressure leaks some air out of the ball.. Those valves aren't perfect, same with the gauges..

        This happens to me all the time with my mountain bike tires. Each time you measure, some air leaks out and it's a couple PSI less the next time you remeasure a few seconds later.

        Lastly, The temperature of the air filling the ball might have been substantially elevated above room temp by the compressor. I.E. Heat of compression, combined with waste

    • I certainly managed to avoid hearing about it until this story on slashdot.
  • Deflate-gate? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Where do I go to complain about people sticking "-gate" onto the end of every scandal?

    • Where do I go to complain about people sticking "-gate" onto the end of every scandal?

      Get the media to do some items on Gategate?

    • by The Rizz ( 1319 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @02:34PM (#48953025)

      Sign the gategate petition to get the FBI to look into it.

    • If you're Republican-oriented, tired of having every scandal called back to Watergate, you can always use the alternate name: "BallGhazi"

      How do you measure your balls?
      If they stick a pin into the football to measure the pressure, it'll let out a little air each time.
      If they measure at a lower temperature than when the ball was inflated, they'll get a lower pressure.

      How do you blow up your balls?

    • There was a scandal locally that the fans for opposing teams were being charged a higher rate when buying tickets at the entrance . It was referred to as gategate and was a big news item for a week..

      But then it transpired that there were no differences and the prices being charged and that the opposing fans had cooked up the whole thing to cause problems for the local team, so form the next week the papers were full of the gategategate.

      Then a whistleblower uncovered evidence to show that there was a di

    • by Strider- ( 39683 )

      Where do I go to complain about people sticking "-gate" onto the end of every scandal?

      Hmmm... If there was another scandal at the Watergate Hotel, would we call it Watergategate?

  • MIT? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @02:02PM (#48952803)
    What? They're afraid MIT is full of Pats fans?
  • It's Sports Nerds asking Science Nerds. Doesn't make any of them less nerdy.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @02:20PM (#48952923)

    If you're doing the Wave, you deserve to get stuffed back in that locker. Or worse.

    As far as Deflate Gate goes, in the end it won't matter. The Hawks are going to walk all over the Pats. The only real question is whether they'll hit any of the numbers I drew in our office pool.

    • The Hawks are going to walk all over the Pats. The only real question is whether they'll hit any of the numbers I drew in our office pool.

      Well obviously my Slashdot account must've been hacked or something...

  • It takes an expert in "gas physics" to explain the ideal gas law to them? Didn't these lawyers have to take a basic physics or chemistry course in their undergrad coursework?

  • by frovingslosh ( 582462 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @02:29PM (#48952989)

    ... to help determine if a drop in temperature — a slowing of the air molecules inside the football — can explain the low pressure ....

    The National Felons League (an organization of Billionaire Team Owners that is considered non-profit so that it pays no taxes) is just looking for an excuse here. The patriots were laughed at when they tried to pull the temperature excuse out of their ass, so they want a University to back up the "pressure goes down with temperature" excuse. They need to do this because even die hard Patriot fans are not buying the "a locker room attendant did this all on his own" story. And lets completely ignore why this supposed temperature drop affected only one teams footballs and not those provided by the other team, or why the problem was only observed when the opposition intercepted a ball and not by any of the Patriot players as they handled the balls.

    • by sribe ( 304414 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @02:40PM (#48953057)

      You fail basic logic here. It's obvious the NFL is not looking for an excuse, they are looking for "real scientists" to back up their already-made rejection of the already-made excuse from the Patriots. The last thing anybody in this case looking for an excuse would do would be to hire physicists.

    • ... to help determine if a drop in temperature — a slowing of the air molecules inside the football — can explain the low pressure ....

      The National Felons League (an organization of Billionaire Team Owners that is considered non-profit so that it pays no taxes) is just looking for an excuse here. The patriots were laughed at when they tried to pull the temperature excuse out of their ass, so they want a University to back up the "pressure goes down with temperature" excuse. They need to do this because even die hard Patriot fans are not buying the "a locker room attendant did this all on his own" story. And lets completely ignore why this supposed temperature drop affected only one teams footballs and not those provided by the other team, or why the problem was only observed when the opposition intercepted a ball and not by any of the Patriot players as they handled the balls.

      It turns out that it's not just a locker room attendant but... an elderly locker room attendant..... Those old guys, they are always up to something nefarious....
      http://www.nfl.com/news/story/... [nfl.com]

      • not just a locker room attendant but... an elderly locker room attendant

        Well, I bet he'll never work again.

        Nor need to.

  • What was the local barometric pressure doing over the course of that same time period? Pressure inside a football is relative - to the pressure of the air outside the football.

    If you combine temperature's effect on air pressure, a local increase in barometric pressure, and possibly some effect of the temp/humidity change from locker room to field, who knows what the range of change is. Experiments will certainly be the best way to figure that out.

  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Sunday February 01, 2015 @02:43PM (#48953081)

    It didn't make any difference to the outcome of the game but it still persists. The NFL has rules governing the inflation... yada yada

    1) It could have been the cold.
    2) It could have been that New England knowingly under-inflated the footballs and played the first half of the game knowing it.
    3) It could have been a mistake on New England's equipment folks, shit happens.

    Chose one of three because it didn't make any difference in the outcome because once the officiating crew check them at half-time they detected it and changed the pressure. If there was a question to a violation of the rules it should have been brought out then by the refs, but they didn't do it and that's a bad problem here. Sure pressure can change, fuck the damn things can leak, it was the cold, an earthquake .. whatever the reason it's over and this countless going back and forth isn't going to change things but it may eventually give the NFL a scapegoat. Belichick is still in the dog house over the videotape episode because he didn't follow through with the punishment that Goodell metered out, he did it in spirit but not how it was agreed so ultimately he'll probably be suspended.

    The NFL has to fix the situation moving forward. If it was cheating, weather conditions, bad equipment, whatever they need to fix it so it's no longer an issue.

    1) The footballs for games should be considered the NFL's property and for the game they should be supplied, monitored and checked by the NFL. MLB for example doesn't let the teams play with baseballs that they bring to the game, the NFL should follow suit. No more teams bringing game balls.
    2) It's questionable that the NFL needs 42 to 54 footballs per game. [mashable.com] It needs to be brought down to a reasonable number 20 or under. If that means no more "momento" footballs touchdowns etc. then too bad. After the game the officials can divvy them up between the two teams so they can distribute them how they see fit.

    • MLB for example doesn't let the teams play with baseballs that they bring to the game,...

      Partially correct. The home team provides the balls that both teams use. There was some kind of problem in Denver with the balls provided by the Rockies. Seems the balls were too dry and so the team installed a giant humidifier to dampen the balls to be like those in other cities. IIRC, given the high elevation with less dense air and dry balls they really accelerated off the bat when hit. I don't think it was called
  • Fortunately we have an ideal gas Law and not just a theory or the anti-science masses would never get a believable answer on whether their circus is rigged.

  • conditions at the time of the incident would prove or disprove it in about 5 minutes.

    Dumb question from someone who knows little about football: wouldn't both teams be playing with the same balls, and thus both have equal benefit from the alleged deflation?

  • ... on one side and stuff.

  • They want to talk to a physicist, I presume, to help determine if a drop in temperature — a slowing of the air molecules inside the football — can explain the low pressure that was found in some of the balls used in the A.F.C. championship game two weeks ago between the New England Patriots and the Indianapolis Colts.

    You don't need a physicist, a local tire dealer will tell you that. As air temperature drops it will cause a loss in pressure in inflated items. In an automotive tire this drop is o

  • If it was environmental, ALL of the balls ON BOTH SIDES would have been underinflated. It doesn't take a room full of nerds to figure that out. Unless the Colts kept their balls in a warmer, this is a stupid waste of time. Have some integrity and stop trying to find ways to let the Patriots off the hook. Cheating is so ingrained in their culture they do it when they don't even need to. And they're not good at cheating because they keep getting caught. Tear their house to the ground and rebuild on
  • Wow, the first time in the history of /. (at least the decades I'm aware about it) when throwing in some well measured sentences about Thermodynamics would be adequate.

    However people avoid it like the plague and instead bring up the "ideal gas law" ... pretty funny.

    We are talking here about 6th grade physics, or depending on your country and education system perhaps 8th grade, and yes it is Thermodynamics, and yes it is so simple EVERYONE should grasp it.

    Pretty surprising that one of the first posters expla

  • The refs felt the under inflated balls and said nothing. The players felt them and said nothing. The equipment manager did it on purpose. The QB has said they did it on purpose and it's okay because everyone does it. So unless they're going to figure out what molecular gas physics can make the people trying to cover this us shut the hell up, this is a waste of time. They cheated, end of story. Hey I know, let's find out what electrical atmospheric phenomenon can make them film their opposing teams' pr
  • First there is a simple solution.. don't allow the teams to provide balls. Make it the domain of the refereeing staff.
    Second, making jock vs geek jokes in TFA or TFS is insulting. Bullying is real and has very real consequences. I was subjected to the joked about circumstance and worse. I am no social justice warrior, but making light of a real and painful thing - one that still occurs in various forms today - only enables those that bully more easily abuse.
    Oh, and of you think that it is a simple sch
  • See headsmartlabs.com and scroll down for an experiment that shows a nearly 2 psi decrease due to lower temperature and a wet football.

    This leaves the question of why the Colts' footballs were still fully inflated.
  • I don't really care about either team, but after everything I've read and seen, I think the ref checking the ball just squeezed them or checked a few and let the balls be approved. There is no list of pressures, and a former ball boy said they would not check every ball. This explains everything. If the ref did his job, checked every ball, logged it, and inflated them to specification, there would be no mystery. Either the ref is above scrutiny, or the league is just trying to cover up that their own proc

    • I would agree, The key point is that the NFL doesn't actually have the test results. That would imply that the refs didn't check them properly. Tom Brady probably approved the the balls because they were the way he like them, and probably didn't give a shit if they were 10 PSI or 14 PSI. Never attribute to Malice what can be explained by incompentance.
  • The NFL appears to be looking anywhere and everywhere, trying to find enough uncertainty so that they can avoid coming to the conclusion that the deflation was intentional.

    .
    Does the NFL want to find out the truth, or do they want to find ways to avoid finding out the truth?

  • Many commenters suggest the ideal gas law could be used to explain the temperature effect on the difference in pressure of the air in the footballs. Be careful about extrapolating its use to other circumstances. The ideal gas law works reasonable well for most gases at temperatures well above the boiling temperature of the gas and at relatively low pressures for small molecules. There's not enough room here to go through it in detail but a quick look in a college general chemistry text book or Wikipedia wil
  • PV=nRT : A ball that is found at 10.5 psig (25.2 psia) at 35'F will be at the regulation minimum pressure 12.5 psig at 74'F. Perfectly reasonable.

    The non-idealities are red-herrings: deviations for Ideal Gas Law are tiny (10ppm?) at this low a pressure and warm a temperature (relative to critical for nitrogen & oxygen). Cold leather shrinks the football pressure boundary, increasing pressure. Condensation might drop pressure 0.5 psi further if the fill-air was saturated from a steamy locker room or

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Yup.

      And this is about as good as its going to get, since we don't know the exact initial conditions (temp. and relative humidity).

  • What I really want to know about "deflate-gate" is how does it even work? What's the advantage of an under-inflated ball? It seems like it would be harder to throw an under-inflated ball accurately. It might help you grip a ball better, but how often do NFL players fumble (enough to really make a difference?)?

    And how would the Patriots keep the other team from getting the same advantage? The deflated balls would end up being used by both sides right? Even if the Patriots were stealthily deflating them on th

  • ... deflation lasts more than 4 hours.

  • "...has reached out to Columbia University's department of physics..."

    I bet they "called" or "emailed."

    "Reached out to" is a complete yambag phrase that needs to GTFO immediately.

    Talk normal, people.

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