As the shoe strains to maintain grip, says Djellouli, tiny sections of the rubber sole rapidly change shape, momentarily losing and regaining contact with the floor thousands of times per second. These quick oscillations occur at a frequency that matches the high-pitched squeak heard on the court.
Djellouli’s team repeatedly slid a sneaker against a smooth glass plate and recorded the squeaks with a microphone while capturing the motion with a high-speed camera. (Submitted by Adel Djellouli )
JohnnyEnzyme@piefed.social 1 hour ago
As a long-time streetballer I rarely got a sense of that, playing 99% of the time outdoors.
Actually, most of the bball shoes I was familiar with didn’t have that fine-line design on the soles. It was more usually geometric shapes and stuff…