Yes, Yes it does
No ( uh, the usuals)
A rubber ball bounces so high because the material it is made of has a spring-back effect. The more force used to throw the ball to the ground, the more it will spring back.
No, color does not affect how high a ball bounces.
yes because it needs to bounce higher
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.
The combination of the material properties of a ball (surface textures, actual materials, amount of air, hardness/ softness, and so on) affects the height of its bounce.
Absolutly. There are five factors that affect how high a ball bounces; mass, shape, friction, impact velocity, and the coefficient of restitution. The coefficient of restituition is the material property that tells you how much energy is lost from the object during impact. It is this property that is most important to your question.
The more power you put into the ball the ball bounces.
The hotter the ball is the higher it bounces. This is because the air in the ball heats up and expands. This tightens the skin and gives the ball a higher elastic potential
Due to a golf ball being so hard it hits the ground the energy is so strong it bounces up higher than any other ball. A golf ball is so hard and that energy just can't wait to get released and bounces up very high. There is many layers in a golf ball. All the layers are Sort of like rubber material so then that is why a golf ball bounces the highest.
For tennis balls, the height that a ball bounces is measured by a series of tests. Refer to the ITF link, below, for further information.
yes!