10,000 lbs roughly
All the three Newtons laws of motion is applicable in the game of hockey. The ball stays where it is unless it is hit and given a force. The acceleration in the ball is proportional to the force given to it through the stick by the player. The ball when rebounds on the goal post is as per the third law of motion. As the stick, the ball and the post are rigid materials there is not much loss due to absorption.
All matter formed together in a tiny ball smaller than an atom. All the force was too much, so the ball exploded. Tiny particles of matter gathered together to form planets.
Well, I'm not sure if this is 100% right for an answer, but I'm doing an essay that involves the laws of motion and baseball right now, so I'll tell you what I put down. Newton's first law of motion states that an object in motion will stay in motion, and an object at rest will stay at rest unless acted on by an unbalanced force. You know that probably, though. So the baseball itself is at rest until an unbalanced force - the force of the pitcher throwing it - acts on it, causing it to move. The ball stays in motion unless an unbalanced force, say the person who catches the ball if there's a strike (the catcher), acts on it by catching it, which stops the motion. Inertia.
A baseball player can throw a baseball 90 m.p.h. What if you asked him to throw a bowling ball? It doesn't go nearly as fast or as far. The acceleration is much less, not because the baseball player is suddenly applying less force, but because the object he is applying the force to has much greater mass.
The second law is about how the force affects the motion. A relatively small force could make, say, a tennis ball accelerate a lot (e.g. changing its direction completely), but could not make the motion of, for example, a truck change very much. This is because the mass of the objects are very different. Similarly, if two objects had the same mass, a large force would change the motion a lot, where as a small force not so much. So the change in motion depends on the size of the force and the mass of the object.
a ball python can cost 80 to 200 dollars it depend on which pet store your at
reptilecity.com sells them for 30$.
Depends on the car and how you are crushing it.
a wild one will eat more and maybe less. the ball python will eat as much as it wishes in the wild. one that you own may starve to death and you might not know.
about 5 to 10 bucks. depends on the size.
No! A Ball python would be a much better choice!
That depends on the morph and sex of the snake.
It is possible, but you may consider this:1. Are you feeding your python too much? Once a month is sufficient.
Yes, ball pythons require a moist and humid enclosure. Pine absorbs the moisture and this can increase the chances of your ball python getting a respiratory infection and having a retained shed. Retained shed is where the snake does not shed all of their skin. This can lead to moth rot, tip of the tail falling off, eye caps and much much more. Cyprus Mulch, cellsorb and newspaper are the best beddings for a ball python.
Like $125-$150
1000 N as well.
yes but not as much as a soild surface becuase the bouncy house absorbs most of the force force by the ball