dont one should do it
The big flat object is subject to air resistance on the earth. In a vacuum, it would fall at the same rate as the smaller object. Also, if the big flat object is a piece of paper, you can crumple it into a ball and it will fall at the same rate as the smaller object because air resistance will not be as much of a factor.
gamma rays are too biggamma rays as big as your DNAbut it is smaller than your single body cell
I think that big robots because they make bigger steps than the smaller robots...;)
There was a big collision at the gas station, it made the cars fall apart!
MUCH larger than the Earth. The Earth has a diameter of 7918 miles, Uranus 31,518 miles. Third largest planet.
No. Ireland has small cars and big cars, just like any country in the world does.
The answer will depend on whether the larger cylinder is 4 times larger in terms of radius, cross-sectional area, or volume. If radius, multiply the smaller radius by 4. If cross-sectional area, multiply the smaller radius by 2. If volume, you do not have enough information.
No. Heavy characters only get to drive heavy cars.
Remote control cars are suitable for children from four to ten years. I recommend not the big cars, but the smaller ones, because these "monster trucks" can be really dangerous.
jappanese cars are diffrent from american cars.american cars are mostly gas guzllers and hevey and big and japan cars are gas savers a lot smaller and very light and iffiniti is not an american car brand for whoever post the last answer
Small cars are better because big cars are to heavy
take a run and jump for it.
better to jump a small battery with a big one. The other way (trying to jump BIG battery with a small one) may result in smaller battery being too weak to do the job or damage to the small battery. The scenario as you have described it is OK.
Depends big ones hold more than 30. Some smaller ones hold just one.
No elephant can jump. They are to big stupid. They are the only manmal to not be able to jump
Cars are both big and small, take your pick.
Put it in a graduated cylinder. a) Find a graduated cylinder big enough to hold a can of Coke. b) Make sure it has a small scale. (Smaller scales are more accurate.) c) Fill the graduated cylinder with water to a mark on the cylinder. d) Find how much higher the water is when you drop the can in.