What is resistance? We're not playing Jeopardy here, people!
It's when you kick the ball to another player on your team. This can be in the air or on the ground, in the air it can be called a lobbed pass or if the player kicks the ball in the penalty box it's called a cross theirs also ground passes and through balls which is when a player passes in front of a player so they can run to it (their can also be a through ball in the air as well
Breathing
They are one in the same. Drag on the ball is created by the friction generated by the ball passing through the air. Whereby the more friction there is on the ball, the shorter it will travel. It can also change the trajectory of the ball depending on what direction the wind is blowing. If it is coming from behind it can lessen the effect of drag, but gravity and drag will always win out.Air drag is the forces that are in opposition to the relative motion of an amount through the air.
Yes, the texture of the ball's surface affects the way it flies hence affecting the ball's momentum through the air. The most common application of this is in golf, where some very highly trained physicists are hard at work creating new and innovative shapes for the dimples in a golf ball.
A bounce pass in basketball is a way of getting the ball to another player without passing it directly to them through the air. Rather, the ball is bounced off the floor to the other player.
Yes, a ball can have acceleration while moving through the air if its velocity is changing. This change in velocity can be due to forces like gravity or air resistance acting on the ball.
Drag.
Passing air or liquid through a means of cleaning it .
To cooling air passing through in room
Part of the cause of 'air resistance' (technically referred to as 'drag') is the friction between the surface of the object moving through the air and the air it is moving through, however a far greater component of drag is caused by pressure variations created by the shape of the object passing through the air. The reason that a golf ball has all those dimples on its surface is to allow the air to flow around it more freely. There is more surface area (an automatically therefore more friction) between the dimpled ball and the air, but because the dimples allow the air to flow more smoothly around the ball, the pressure differential between the air in front of the ball and the air behing the ball is reduced, so the dimpled ball can go farther than a smooth ball of equal weight under equal launch conditions.
Balls or hits that are spun in the air curve through the air depending on which way they are spun. In good table tennis, most shots will have various directions and elements of spin imparted to them, especially topspin. Spinning balls moving through the air curve as a result of what is called, "the magnus effect" - where, due to the clash of the air that hugs the ball as it spins and the oncoming air through which the ball is travelling, greater air pressure is built up on that side of the ball and a 'lift' is imparted to the ball that reults in a turning or curving path of the ball through the air. Ready examples of this are the "bending" of a soccer ball that is kicked so as to impart spin on the ball and the golf ball lift that allows the ball to travel further through the air as it is hit with underspin.
Blow inside the ball through the hole!