It may or may not because the properties of the filling determine the height to which a ball will bounce.
Yes. More air in the basketball will make it bounce higher. Yes. Replacing the air with even a lighter gasses, such as helium, results in a higher bounce. It follows that, removing air or using heavier gasses to inflate a ball will result in a lower bounce. YES. Adding more air to the ball lessens the particles in the ball to bounce around. Putting more air in a basket ball will definitely make it bounce higher. If you put light gasses in it like helium then it will bounce even higher. If you take air out of it, it will bounce lower.After a while of putting air in a basketball it starts to bounce lower.
Temperature can affect the bounce height of a ball due to its impact on the elasticity of the ball material. In general, higher temperatures can make the ball material softer and less bouncy, resulting in a lower bounce height. Conversely, lower temperatures can make the material stiffer and more elastic, leading to a higher bounce height.
Yes. It make it bounce higher because without air it is flat so it won't bounce at all
The force needed to make a ball bounce depends on factors like the weight and material of the ball, the surface it lands on, and the height of the bounce desired. Generally, a greater force will result in a higher bounce, but it must be applied at the right angle and with the right timing to achieve the desired effect.
I watched the ball bounce. (active sentence) The bounce of a small ball was greater than the bounce of a large ball. (passive sentence)
Yes it will because the pressure in the ball will push it up and down
A soccer ball will typically bounce higher on concrete than on grass. Concrete provides a harder and more solid surface, allowing for a better rebound of the ball compared to the softer and more absorbent surface of grass.
Yes, because the gas molecules in the tennis ball expand. When the molecules expand there energy increases.
Hot. Personal experiments have shown that temperatures below 25°C make the ball bounce less. From 25°C and upwards there aren't any greater changes in height of bounce. The balls bounce almost the same.
it will bounce higher if there is more air. ex. Flat basketball- being flat, the ball will just hit the floor and will be pressed inwards on the spot it landed pumped basketball- being full of air, the ball hits the ground and like a flat basketball is pressed inwards. but because there's air in it, the air will make the ball retain its shape and bounce.
That depends on the elasticity of the material used to make the rugby ball, the pressure to which it is inflated, and the force exerted on the ball to make it bounce.
Not to any appreciable extent. Bounce is caused by the elasticity of the material comprising the ball and the surface on which it is bounced.For example, on concrete a basketball will bounce higher than a baseball, but a golf ball--How high it bounces depends on how much force you exert on it. If you only let it drop, it will not bounce higher that the point you dropped it from and every time it bounces, it will go less and less high. anyway, the bigger the ball, the more force you will have to exert on it to make it bounce higher than the point it was dropped, or "bounced" from.