Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Fluid Dynamics”
The Inverse Magnus Effect - Spinning Balls Go Weirdly
Every physics teacher’s favorite sports demo goes like this: put backspin on a ball, and it gets extra lift. Put sidespin on a football and it bends around the wall. This is the Magnus effect, described by Heinrich Gustav Magnus in 1852 and observed by Newton watching tennis players almost two centuries earlier. It’s reliable, intuitive, and drilled into every player who has ever shaped a shot.
Except sometimes it runs in reverse. Under a specific combination of speed and spin, a ball curves against its spin — a backspun ball dips instead of floating, a hooked golf shot breaks the wrong way. Fluid dynamicists call this the inverse (or reverse, or negative) Magnus effect, and it’s not a measurement glitch. It’s a real, repeatable phenomenon that lives in a narrow aerodynamic window, and it explains some of the strangest ball flight in sport.