Materials that bounce back to shape after the force applied is stopped are called Elastic Materials.
elastic :)
The organelles that collect excess water inside the cell and force it out are called contractile vacuoles. It is primarily involved in osmoregulation and is usually found in protists and unicellular algae.
The cell of the muscle tissue shorten to exert force. These tissues will support movement of the various muscles in the by exerting force.
Retrovirus replicates inside cells that have entered by force using an enzyme called "reverse transcriptase" which transcribes RNA into DNA.
The fastest velocity a falling object can reach is called its terminal velocity. This happens when the force of air resistance is equal to the downwards force of weight (gravity), so the object is in equilibrium, and thus reaches a constant velocity.
A bonsai charge is a military tactic named after the bonsai tree, which is small but resilient. It refers to a small-scale, often suicidal attack where a small group of soldiers launches a surprise assault against a larger enemy force. The term is used to describe the strategy's similarity to a bonsai tree, as it involves a focused and intense attack from a seemingly insignificant force.
That depends on the elasticity of the material used to make the rugby ball, the pressure to which it is inflated, and the force exerted on the ball to make it bounce.
The amount of force is called stress.
bouncing is determined by a physical characteristic the object has called elasticity, or due to the force exerted on the round object by whatever it lands on. for example, a snowball probably won't bounce if you throw it on pavement, but it might bounce off a trampoline. to make a round object not bounce, you can A) make it out of something that will break apart on contact, B) make it out a of a really inelastic material, or C) drop it onto a slanted surface where it's more likely to roll than bounce.
Starting with any one corner of the car, force the car to bounce as hard as you can. If the car continues to bounce more than one and a half times after you stopped forcing it, the shock or strut in that corner is gone bad. Test each corner.
gravity will make you bounce higher because as cord gets longer the more force it will take to move it.
A force, of itself, can not wear down anything. A force, of itself, can not move.
Gravitational force
casting
yes but not as much as a soild surface becuase the bouncy house absorbs most of the force force by the ball
Not to any appreciable extent. Bounce is caused by the elasticity of the material comprising the ball and the surface on which it is bounced.For example, on concrete a basketball will bounce higher than a baseball, but a golf ball--How high it bounces depends on how much force you exert on it. If you only let it drop, it will not bounce higher that the point you dropped it from and every time it bounces, it will go less and less high. anyway, the bigger the ball, the more force you will have to exert on it to make it bounce higher than the point it was dropped, or "bounced" from.
Tension. The force itself is not elastic, but the material being pulled may be.
Several factors affect the bounce of a basketball including the height that it was dropped from. The bounce factor includes elasticity, air pressure, force applied to it, and how rigid the surface is that the ball is bounced on.