Wiki User
β 11y ago72 meter
Wiki User
β 11y ago89
rubber ball
3 ft
Math is used to quantify scientific observations and predictions. Ie: how high will the ball bounce when dropped from 10 feet?
Impossible to answer without knowing the characteristics of the item dropped. A Super Ball bounces nearly as high as the drop height, a good quality steel spring a bit less, and a baseball much less.
72 meters
After the 7th bounce, the ball will reach a height of 1 meter. This is because after each bounce, the ball reaches half of its previous height. So, after 1 bounce it reaches 64 meters, after 2 bounces it reaches 32 meters, after 3 bounces it reaches 16 meters, and so on, until it reaches 1 meter after the 7th bounce.
Answer: 66 Meters. Just had that same problem on a math mates worksheet.
After each bounce, the ball reaches a height that is 70% of the previous height. The height of the ball after each bounce can be calculated as 10m, 7m, 4.9m, 3.43m, 2.401m, and so on. The ball will be below 2 meters after the 4th bounce.
It falls down. When it reaches a hard bottom it is likely to bounce whereas if it hits water it will sink.
After each bounce, the ball reaches half of the height from which it was dropped. Since the ball was initially dropped from 10 feet, on the first bounce it will reach 5 feet, on the second bounce it will reach 2.5 feet, on the third bounce it will reach 1.25 feet, and on the fourth bounce it will reach 0.625 feet.
89
On the third bounce, the ball will bounce to a height of 35% of the previous bounce height (35% of 35% of 125m). Therefore, the ball will bounce to a height of (35/100) x (35/100) x 125m = 15.63m on the third bounce.
Yes, the height at which a ball is dropped can affect its bounce. The higher the drop height, the higher the bounce due to an increase in potential energy during the fall. However, factors like the ball material, surface it bounces on, and air resistance also play a role in determining the bounce height.
After the first bounce, the ball reaches a height of 24 feet. After the second bounce, it reaches a height of 12 feet, and so on. The ball will bounce an infinite number of times, each time reaching half the height of the previous bounce, getting closer and closer to the ground but never actually reaching 0 feet in height.
no they do not
Yes - the greater the height an item dropped the resulting bounce is higher