
This is a photo of our set up, which is described in more detail in our method section. Although it gave us a few problems it was a very efficient set up when all is said and done.

This is one of the multi flash photo of the white ball. As you can see even with an interval of .2999 ms between flashes we can not capture distortion in the ball because the duration of the collision is so short. This photo helped us decide to try a less rigid ball.

This is a multi-flash photo of the Goooz ball. The ball's color made it hard to distinguish the different flashes.

However, with a lot of digital post-processing we could clean up the photos and possibly get data from them. But, for practicality's sake, we had to come up with another method.

We did a series of single flash photos of the Goooz ball at different delays to mimic the "rotating mirror" technique. With this new strategy data analysis was much simpler and the photos were clearer.
