Well if your looking for examples, One is a soccer ball
A solid figure need not have two parts. For example a rubber ball is only one sphere - nothing else.
A cylinder is a solid figure that can both roll and slide. Its shape and symmetry allows it to roll smoothly along a surface, and its circular base provides stability for sliding. Both of these properties make it suitable for applications such as wheels and rollers.
Just look at the house we are in,the solid figures play a key role in building the house. Look at the desk,the ball,the table,the cup,so many things in our life,they are designed by solid figures first.we can say,it is the solid figure make our life more artistical.
The solid ball, will have more mass in comparison to the hollow ball of the same radius. Since, momentum of an object is the product of its mass and velocity, the solid object will have more momentum. Therefore, the force required to stop the solid ball will be much greater than the force required to stop the hollow ball (since, the hollow ball will have less momentum because of its less mass). That's why its difficult to catch a a solid ball as compared to a hollow ball of equal radius.skhatti
solid figure that has the shape of a round ball
Well if your looking for examples, One is a soccer ball
A bowling ball would be considered a sphere.
A solid figure need not have two parts. For example a rubber ball is only one sphere - nothing else.
A solid ball would have more recoil compared to a hollow ball when fired out of a cannon. This is because the solid ball has more mass and thus more inertia, resulting in greater recoil force upon firing. The hollow ball, being lighter, would experience less recoil force due to its lower mass.
Depends on the medium, and whether the ball is solid or not. A solid ball would float on mercury, sink in water. If it were hollow enough (or filled with, say, cork) it would float in water.
A cylinder is a solid figure that can both roll and slide. Its shape and symmetry allows it to roll smoothly along a surface, and its circular base provides stability for sliding. Both of these properties make it suitable for applications such as wheels and rollers.
Just look at the house we are in,the solid figures play a key role in building the house. Look at the desk,the ball,the table,the cup,so many things in our life,they are designed by solid figures first.we can say,it is the solid figure make our life more artistical.
Yes and no. When it 'falls' out of a cannon/musket, the solid steel ball will fall at an significantly speedier rate than that of a conventional solid steel ball not emerging from a cannon/musket housing. But sometimes the other solid steel ball will drop slightly faster than the solid steel ball as well. No one knows why really. It's a mystery. :-) (don't know what this question was supposed to mean but that was fun, lol)
No, a ball is not a gas. A ball is a solid object typically made of materials like rubber, plastic, or leather. Gas is a state of matter that has no fixed shape or volume and fills the space available to it.
The simple answer is no. If you look at the equation of motion for a falling object, you can see that it doesn't depend on the weight of the objest. All objects fall with the same acceleration regardless of their size or shape.Keep in mind though that this neglects air friction. If you consider air friction, then the steel ball would fall faster since it is denser. In other words, the lighter rubber ball would get slowed down by the air more. This is unlikely to have much effect if you drop the two balls a small distance; however, if you dropped them out of an airplane the steel ball would likely land much sooner than the rubber ball.
A solid.