That is equivilent to dropping it from a height of 5 meters, about 16 feet, so I would say no but you don't specify the mass or weight of the ball of rolled up paper. A single sheet of paper, rolled up, no, several tons of paper wrapped into a tightly packed ball the size of a tank, yes.
There are 1000 meters/second in 1 kilo meters/second
Acceleration is not measured in meters/second. Meters/second is a unit of speed. Since acceleration is defined as change of speed divided by time, the units are meters/second/second, usually written as meters/second2.
10 meters/second2 refers to an acceleration. It is the same as 10 (meters/second) / second, and means that every second, the speed changes by 10 meters/second.
6.25 meters per second.
Multiply mph by 0.45 to get meters per second. So, 55 x 0.45 = about 24.6 meters per second.
Acceleration is a change in speed, measured per second and so would be meters per second per second or meters per second squared.
177.543 meters per second = 639,154.8 meters per hour.
The acceleration is expressed in meters per second square, which really means (meters / second) / second. Every second, the skydiver will be 10 meters per second faster than the previous second. Therefore, after 3 seconds, he will have a speed of 30 meters per second.
6 meters per second. Explanation: After 1 second = 2 meters per second. After 2 seconds = 4 meters per second. After 3 seconds = 6 meters per second.
1 foot per second = 0.3048 meters per second.
feet per second x 0.3048 = meters per second
343 meters/second