Not sure how this is even possible

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Speedy thing goes in; speedy thing comes out.

damascusraven
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The splash creates a pocket of air and when the water rushes back in it creates a pressure wave. If the ball enters at the right time it will shoot out with greater velocity.

donalddconard
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Yeah, the dude who jumped in the water knows how the physics works.

scottfilson
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Bro unlocked the source code of physics

studiotru-qz
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For those of you who don’t know what this is, it’s called a Manu. It’s like a cannonball but the Manu technique generates a lot more splash which is the purpose of it. You want to get the highest splash. Kiwi’s do this best thanks to their big figures and amazing technique.

default
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A body falling into water creates a cavity, deforming and breaking the surface. The water re-balances it’s surface accounting for the extra volume, but it needs to fill the cavity. It rushes back in from every other direction but the top (because it isn’t above the cavity), creating a net upward force. Water at the edge of the filling ends up in the center with the force of the rest of the filling water and it’s own momentum pushing it up out of the water, so it springs up in a splash, roughly vertical. If you add an item weighing less than what the upward force can lift, it will be launched just like the splash, and the lighter the further

hudmo
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For every action there’s a normal reaction perpendicular to it.

For example when you hit a wall with 1 newton, the wall hits you back with 1 newton in a direction perpendicular to the direction you hit it.

What’s happening here is that the guy is fat so when he jumped into the pool he “hit” the pool with a high force and the pool returned the hit with the same force. The ball happened to be at the surface when that happened so it got hit with that crazy force.

Bleach-oexq
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As he goes in, a temporary "hole" in the water is created. As the water fill it back up, it hits the other water on the opposite side as then the water fires up, hitting the ball with enough force to send it flying.

Edward-xy
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item clipping is a speedrun strat that allows the player to launch certain equipped items by taking advantage of the terrain's unstable geometry in various locations. This glitch almost always works in water with proper timing due to the water's constantly shifting geometry, which often clips into it's self, more effectively pinching the item, and therefore causing the hit boxes to violently reject each other.

chaster_mief
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It's actually the same principals as when you try to give your cat a bath.

jonasan-san
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“Did you fix the physics engine like I asked?”
“No.”

TribeMasterCat
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I had a phd in physics, the guy turned into the ball.

jonathanngai
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He made the "sploosh" hit the ball. While calculating the trajectory like the madman, that gentleman is.

puccoboy
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The water pressure creates a powerful force that shoots the ball out. Timing is key in making this physics magic happen.

Odurs
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Same as a “double-bounce” on a trampoline except wetter.

_..-.._..-.._
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The dude found a physics glitch in real life

GlassesIncorp
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Buoyancy. It’s not rocket science, it’s Hawaiian physics. Hold the ball until it pops up supa fahhh bradda 😂

realhumanbeingyesyesveryreal
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Usually you jump with the object in your hand, but this person is on some advanced technique shit

BurnttBurrito
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Archimedes principle states that the buoyancy force is equal to the weight of the water displaced. The volume of the water displaced is equal to the volume of the guy because he jumped in, so the rugby ball is launched with the buoyancy force equal to the weight (volume x density) of the water, thus firing it up in the air.

therealtrevo
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As the guy drops into the water and pushes it away, the water then tries to rush back to fill the void, filling the bottom up. You can see this dropping anything in water (where the water comes back up and out above the surface of the body of water). The water rushes at such a high force that it essentially punts the ball high up into the air.

EasleyAmused