No, that defies the laws of physics. It would seem to me that the ball would slow because it hit a body at rest and was not acted upon by another force.
Less friction
I don't think you can convert a cubic dimension into a squared dimension as a cubic dimension applies to volume and a squared dimension applies to area. Length X Width = Area (squared dimension); Length X Width X Depth = Volume (cubic dimension). One square yard = nine square feet; One cubic yard = 27 cubic feet.
No if it hits the turf it is a dead ball and place where the line of scrimmage was
Cincinnati
Natural grass tends to give the ball a slightly slower, softer bounce. Artificial turf allows the ball to mvoe faster and bounce a littler harder.
Many skills are involved in hockey its self, but to play on astro turf, speed is needed because the ball does not stop once it is hit. Compared to grass, turf is a high speed game. The basic skills such as a drag, push, hit, slap hit, pass, jink are the most important ones.
turf grass
The ball would roll downhill.
In the air the distance wont be affected unless the ball is wet (it will weigh more), on the ground, usually its the smoother the surface the farther it will go, for example a ball will go farther on a gym floor then it will on turf, and it will go farther on turf then it will on grass.
Less friction
a soccer ball rolls farther on astro turfa ball may skim further on astro however i think that it should role further on solid ground, so on the street, also on grass and astro the speed of the ball changes due to the weather, if the ground is wet then the ball will skid more.
The typical freekick achieves speeds between 80 and 100km\h. An Adidas Jabulani weighs 440 grams.
There is a leak in Tropicana Fields' roof
i tested it and the same speed it was before