Tennis balls are lighter than cricket balls.
Therefore less mass. If a tennis ball travels at the same speed its momentum (mass x velocity) is lower. Therefore less momentum an easier to stop.
Short answer, less mass and same speed means less momentum
Tennis balls are lighter than cricket balls. Therefore less mass. If a tennis ball travels at the same speed its momentum (mass x velocity) is lower. Therefore less momentum an easier to stop.
It is easier to move a ping pong ball than a Bowling ball because the ping pong ball has far less mass than the bowling ball. Since force = mass times acceleration, it will take far less force to accelerate (and thus move) the ping pong ball.
The ping pong ball is the least massive (lowest in weight) of all the objects, so it takes less force to move it compared to the other objects.
The bowling ball because it has more mass
It is an example of inertia.
air, water etc. can move object. Example: A ping pong ball is on a table. Blow on the ball it moves.
A golf ball will fly further than a ping pong ball. The low mass/weight of a ping pong ball makes it more susceptible to air friction. This greater drag on the ball slow it down sooner than the golf ball.
The ping pong ball is the least massive (lowest in weight) of all the objects, so it takes less force to move it compared to the other objects.
6x bigger
The bowling ball because it has more mass
The bowling ball is better for knocking down pins because it is larger and alson has a larger mass
A bowling ball since it has more mass. However, both the ping pong ball and the bowling ball are subjected to the same acceleration due to gravity, specifically 9.82 m s-2 and, neglecting air resistance, would fall at the same rate of speed.
This is an example of momentum, which is a product of the object's mass and its velocity. It is also harder to start a bowling ball rolling than a ping-pong ball due to inertia, which is related only to the object's mass.
a golf ball is heavier
I think the golf ball has more inertia than ping pong ball, becuase of its weight. It is much heavy which result that it could stay at rest more, than a very lightweight ping pong ball.
Blowing it?
It is an example of inertia.
While a bowling ball is completely filled on the inside save the finger holes, a tennis ball's interior is completely hollow, and is also much smaller than a bowling ball. A bowling ball has more matter.
In deep space, free of other gravitational influences, theoretically, yes. All objects with mass have "gravity" -- as long as the bowling ball contains more mass, there ought to be a particular velocity at which a golf ball would orbit it.