PROBLEM A: The Sweet Spot
Explain the “sweet spot” on a baseball bat.
Every hitter knows that there is a spot on the fat part of a baseball bat where maximum power
is transferred to the ball when hit. Why isn’t this spot at the end of the bat? A simple
explanation based on torque might seem to identify the end of the bat as the sweet spot, but
this is known to be empirically incorrect. Develop a model that helps explain this empirical
finding.
Some players believe that “corking” a bat (hollowing out a cylinder in the head of the bat and
filling it with cork or rubber, then replacing a wood cap) enhances the “sweet spot” effect.
Augment your model to confirm or deny this effect. Does this explain why Major League
Baseball prohibits “corking”?
Does the material out of which the bat is constructed matter? That is, does this model predict
different behavior for wood (usually ash) or metal (usually aluminum) bats? Is this why Major
League Baseball prohibits metal bats?
PROBLEM B: Criminology
In 1981 Peter Sutcliffe was convicted of thirteen murders and subjecting a number of other
people to vicious attacks. One of the methods used to narrow the search for Mr. Sutcliffe was to
find a “center of mass” of the locations of the attacks. In the end, the suspect happened to live
in the same town predicted by this technique. Since that time, a number of more sophisticated
techniques have been developed to determine the “geographical profile” of a suspected serial
criminal based on the locations of the crimes.
Your team has been asked by a local police agency to develop a method to aid in their
investigations of serial criminals. The approach that you develop should make use of at least
two different schemes to generate a geographical profile. You should develop a technique to
combine the results of the different schemes and generate a useful prediction for law
enforcement officers. The prediction should provide some kind of estimate or guidance about
possible locations of the next crime based on the time and locations of the past crime scenes. If
you make use of any other evidence in your estimate, you must provide specific details about
how you incorporate the extra information. Your method should also provide some kind of
estimate about how reliable the estimate will be in a given situation, including appropriate
warnings.
In addition to the required one-page summary, your report should include an additional
two-page executive summary. The executive summary should provide a broad overview of the
potential issues. It should provide an overview of your approach and describe situations when it
is an appropriate tool and situations in which it is not an appropriate tool. The executive
summary will be read by a chief of police and should include technical details appropriate to the
intended audience.