Yes, because it is on your property, and is now your responsibility, since it is on your lawn, and not on theirs, it can be yours because it is on your property.
Keep your eye on the ball from the time it leaves the pitchers hand to when it makes contact with the bat.
Is it legal to keep your trailer hitch attached to your truck when your not pulling a trailer in New jersey?
I don't think that it's legal. You can all ways ask you neighbor to move his camera, or at least direct it in a different direction.
Yes. Actual firearms are legal, so are paintball guns.
I believe that if the track is spral and the it curves left the ball will continue to keep curving
No you have to keep the ball in place from where it lies even if it hits a cart, tree, building, etc.
You have a few options. You can: * Be a total dick to your neighbor, pester him until he removes the vehicle. * Threaten to take legal action * Ask politely and wait for then to move it * Move the vehicle onto their property without asking The last two options may keep you on good terms with your neighbor, but you can't do much.
keep them inside or inside a fence or kennel
Keep the Ball Rolling was created in 1979.
Picture a ball on a string being whirled about the head of an experimenter. If the string breaks, the centripetal force disappears. The ball leaves on a tangent path form its (previous) circular path. Yes, it's that simple. The string provided centripetal force, by virtue of its tensile strength, to the ball to keep that ball moving in a circle. When the string broke, there was no force left to accelerate the ball "in" and keep it moving in an arc.
Trees that keep their leaves in summer and lose them in autumn are deciduous.
Talking to your neighbor regularly, mailing them letters with gifts attached and completing their requests are all ways to keep a neighbor from moving. If the neighbor does mention that they plan on moving, selecting the option from them to stay could keep them from moving.