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Yes the force and the energy affect the bounciness of the ball.If the ball is released from 1 meter above the ground, it will fall with certain force and energy.Now let say we drop the same ball from a height of 10m then we have increased its potential energy so this time striking the surface with more force and energy and higher the ball will bounce in this case.The ball has its "bounciness" built in. The amount of energy transferred on a bounce (or series of bounces) simply "explores" what the ball already has.
yes
does air pressure affect the distance a soccer ball travels
Yes. The viscosity, smoothness, slant, hardness and other factors of the surface would affect the distance a ball would travel. For example, a ball will travel much farther down a wet aluminum slide than up a sand dune.
Q: How does temperature affect the distance that a golf ball will travel?A: Golf balls are made from a solid or liquid core with tightly-wound materials, and require a certain amount of elasticity in order to release kinetic energy during a collision (bounce). The property of elasticity is affected by temperature. Warm balls have a greater ability to flex during a collision, thereby recovering more kinetic energy than golf balls at colder temperatures. This scientific principle is called the coefficient of restitution. Simply put, the ball's 'bounciness' is dependent on the elasticity of the materials, and the bouncier the ball, the farther it will travel when struck by a golf club.
How does stitching effect the distance a soccer ball will travel?
because it
Yes.
Yes, ball preasure does effect kicking distance.
The way a golf ball bounces definitely affects the distance that it will travel. There are different weights and types of golf balls for this reason.
Yes the force and the energy affect the bounciness of the ball.If the ball is released from 1 meter above the ground, it will fall with certain force and energy.Now let say we drop the same ball from a height of 10m then we have increased its potential energy so this time striking the surface with more force and energy and higher the ball will bounce in this case.The ball has its "bounciness" built in. The amount of energy transferred on a bounce (or series of bounces) simply "explores" what the ball already has.
No.
Yes if the wind is blowing hard it will move the distance of the ball
yes..."As a softball flies through the air, the air pushes back against it, resisting its motion and decreasing the distance the ball travels."...that is why
No this is simply to hold the ball together, it does not affect the distance the ball travels in any way.
Naturally the ball in space will travel the longest distance as long as it does not bump into something along the way. Gravity on earth will cause the ball thrown to fall back to earth.
No, it has no effect.