Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 August 2016
The eminent physicist, Peter Guthrie Tait, having constructed mathematical models of the flight of a golf-ball and having carried out an extensive series of experiments to evaluate their parameters, specified the maximum distance a golf ball could be made to carry by the most accomplished golfer. He was then upstaged by his son who hit a monumental drive which pitched even further. The golfing press of the day - what there was of it - was happy to run the story and scientists themselves seemed to enjoy the joke at Tait’s expense. Macfarlane, for example, related the anecdote in the following terms in a lecture delivered just eight months after Tait’s death:
“He […] communicated his results to the Royal Society of Edinburgh and there stated definitely the longest distance to which a golf ball could possibly be driven […] but the champion golfer upset his father's calculations […] by driving a ball five yards further.”