A huge container of water , that has accurate measureings that tells u the increased amount of water
The answer will depend on what characteristic of the ball is being measured: its radius, volume, mass, weight, shine?
Most likely the bowling ball. According to the laws of physics, an object with more inertia accelerates slower but is harder to stop. The bowling ball accelerates ...
Float the ball in water and calculate the displacement.
A bowling ball has a greater density than a beach ball. Density is defined as mass per unit volume, and a bowling ball is made of dense materials like plastic and a core of heavy materials, whereas a beach ball is typically made of lightweight plastic and filled with air. As a result, the mass of the bowling ball relative to its volume is significantly higher than that of the beach ball.
The instrument used to measure the diameter of spherical objects is called calipers.
We can approximate the radius of a bowling ball to be about 26.7", the formula for calculating the volume of a sphere is (4/3)*pi*r^3 ,so the volume of our bowling ball is 79730.12 cubic inches
To calculate the density of the bowling ball, use the formula: density = mass/volume. The mass is 3.0 kg and the volume is 0.0050 m³. Thus, the density is 3.0 kg / 0.0050 m³ = 600 kg/m³. Therefore, the density of the bowling ball is 600 kg/m³.
Ten-pin bowling balls usually weigh from about 6 pounds (around 2800 grams) to 16 pounds (about 7200 grams) There are no bowling balls that weigh 200 grams (though such a ball would be leagal as there is no minimum weight) but if there were, the mass of the ball divided by the volume of the ball gives the density. The volume of a standard bowling ball is about 5500 cubic centimeters (I assumed a circumference of 27 inches and calculated from that) 200 / 5500 = 0.036 g/cm3 Compare to the density of air = 0,0012 g/cm3
yes
Kilograms
Pounds are used to measure the mass of a bowling ball in the US, although the mass of an object that size is usually measured in kilograms in other countries.Pounds (US)
a bowling ball