Want this question answered?
Probably concrete, but hard packed sand would do pretty well.
Yes. The viscosity, smoothness, slant, hardness and other factors of the surface would affect the distance a ball would travel. For example, a ball will travel much farther down a wet aluminum slide than up a sand dune.
The one with the greatest mass has the greatest inertia. So, it will be the bowling ball.
It would depend what is in the sand, but I would think it would be very heavy!
the velocity of a car is be reduced when sand is loaded onto it owning to the fact that there is increase in mass of the car
The sand puts weight on it and it makes in sink.
If you stirred water and sand together, you would have a mixture of water and sand until the sand sinks to the bottom.
It does happen. The UK recover quite a lot of the sand they need from the seabed. Otherwise, we may make a sand by grinding rocks to small sizes.
It would be covered in sand and eevrything would be brown sand color just an inferance................ :)
the fire will go out.
It is possible that the sand may fuse together into larger conglomerations of sand, or rough glass.
Probably concrete, but hard packed sand would do pretty well.
A "sand Iron" is a golf club (iron) designed to hit a golf ball out of a sand trap or bunker.
A "sand wedge" is used in the sport of golf.
The sand would settle to the bottom. water would be in a layer above. vinegar would be at the top.
The whole beach or whatever it was on would be totally flat. Wind is what shapes sand dunes. Without it, they just would not exist.
Sand is at the bottom; water above and above water the oil.