It is impossible to create a frictionless surface upon which a ball will roll without stopping. This is firstly because no two surfaces have a fritional constant of zero in that there is no surface which is perfectly smooth. Also, even if there were a true frictionless surface, a ball would not be able to roll along it forever due to air resistance.
Reducing surface roughness, applying lubricants, and using ball bearings can help reduce frictional forces between surfaces.
It is impossible to create a frictionless surface upon which a ball will roll without stopping. This is firstly because no two surfaces have a fritional constant of zero in that there is no surface which is perfectly smooth. Also, even if there were a true frictionless surface, a ball would not be able to roll along it forever due to air resistance.
A moving ball eventually comes to rest due to friction between its surface and the surface it's rolling on. As the ball moves, friction gradually slows it down until it comes to a stop. Without any external force acting on the ball, it will continue to slow down and eventually stop due to this frictional force.
It does because when the ball hits the surface and the surface magnified would look rugged anyways when the ball hits the surface the friction pulls on the ball causind it to slow down and if you roll a brick down a hill you will find it will stop easier than a ball smooth surface
When a ball bounces, there are primarily two forces at play: gravity, which pulls the ball downwards, and the normal force exerted by the surface the ball bounces off of, which pushes the ball back up. These forces determine the height of the bounce and the time it takes for the ball to return to the surface. Frictional forces may also play a role in influencing the bounce of the ball.
Not possible try "surface area"
The net force is the difference between the applied force and the frictional force: 22.8N - 2.3N = 20.5N.
A ball rolling on the ground slows down due to friction between the ball and the surface it is rolling on. As the ball moves, frictional forces act in the opposite direction of its motion, causing it to lose kinetic energy and gradually slow down. Additionally, air resistance may also contribute to the slowing down of the ball.
The limiting frictional force is the force that slows down the tennis ball on the roller coaster.
Friction between the ball and the surface it is rolling on will eventually stop the ball from rolling after it comes down a hill. As the ball rolls, this friction converts the kinetic energy of the ball into heat, gradually slowing it down until it stops.
friction is what slows everything down. if there was no gravity and you rolled a ball across the ground, then the ball would just keep rolling forever
The ball will keep rolling, because of Isaac Newton's Third law of Motion, "An object at rest will stay at rest and an object in motion stays in motion unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. If there is no force acting on the ball, then there is no unbalanced force. Although this question is phrased incorrectly because there is a force acting on it if it is moving, momentum, I think the answer you are looking for is it will keep rolling. The ball will keep rolling, because of Isaac Newton's Third law of Motion, "An object at rest will stay at rest and an object in motion stays in motion unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. If there is no force acting on the ball, then there is no unbalanced force. Although this question is phrased incorrectly because there is a force acting on it if it is moving, momentum, I think the answer you are looking for is it will keep rolling.