It will fall with increasing velocity due to gravity and reach the peak velocity just before hitting the ground.
72 meters
72 meter
As long as the tennis ball is not thrust downward, yes, the tennis ball will bounce back to the same proportion of its original height, no matter how far it's dropped, as long as the height is small enough that air resistance can be ignored. The ball will eventually come to rest due to this air resistance.
1.39 Ns up
Answer: 66 Meters. Just had that same problem on a math mates worksheet.
When a ball is dropped from a certain height, its initial speed is 0 m/s as it starts from rest. The ball gains speed as it falls due to gravity pulling it downwards.
when a ball is dropped it hits the floor and the ball is flattened. That creates energy. The only way the ball can release the energy is bouncing back up. But the ball starts to lose its height and the ball eventually loses its energy and comes to a stop.
20 meters per second
it will move because your foot is the unbalanced force. newtons law states that a object and rest will stay at rest unless a unbalanced force hits it. a object in motion will stay in motion unless something stops it.
The potential energy of the rubber ball is converted into kinetic energy as it falls. When the ball hits the ground, some of the energy is absorbed by the ball and the ground, while the rest is converted to other forms such as sound and heat.
9.8 meters if you are on the planet Earth. Weight does not matter.
That would depend on the velocity of the soccer ball not at rest.