Maybe you need a new therastat( think I spelled that wrong LOL) Have you check that?
The basketball at room temperature has more energy, because cold is just the absence of energy. The ball that is frozen would not bounce as high because it is wanting to stay in that shape, and has less time to react.
At mercury's own freezing temperature, the mercury can be either solid or liquid; that is the definition of "freezing temperature".
The temperature of a room will effect the amount a ball will rebound (bounce) off the floor, off a backboard or rim. If a basketball is filled with air to the regulation pressure and then it is moved to a room with a higher temperature, the ball will soon start to bounce more. Alternatively if you move it a cooler room it will bounce less. This is because: Pressure = Volume x Temperature. As the temperature rises (assuming there is no leak in the ball to allow the volume of air to escape) the pressure on the inside of the ball will increase, this will increase the bounce of the ball. If, instead of the temperature rising, it decreases the pressure on the inside of the ball will go down and the bounciness of the ball will go down as well.
A glass ball will not bounce.
repel or bounce off from one another...if it was high temperature and high presure the protons would fuse together
yes but it would bounce wikid high(no gravity)
Hot. Personal experiments have shown that temperatures below 25°C make the ball bounce less. From 25°C and upwards there aren't any greater changes in height of bounce. The balls bounce almost the same.
The fan will work - but it will spin constantly - as it would have no data to rely on to regulate the temperature of the CPU.
when the temperature is cold, the air inside the basketball will shrink, and hotter temperatures will expand the air creating more air pressure inside the ball making it bounce better, try putting a balloon in the freezer and seeing how much it shrinks and expands when you take it out. But what would happen if the pressure in the basketball was the same in the warm and cold conditions? The colder ball would have to have more mass of air inside of it. At least to first order, they response to the external impact would be the same. I would bet that the stiffer rubber would still make the cold ball bounce lower than the warm one, but it would be an interesting experiment. Remember that air affects the height the basketball bounces. Colder air is more dense and therefore has more friction than warm air. The difference isn't entirely noticeable in something as big as a basketball but for example in badminton the shuttlecock which has high air resistance responds differently in different climates. You need to buy either faster or slower shuttles depending on the temperature on the day.
You can't let it rebounced twice before you hit it, but you can let it bounce once or not bounce at all,
Still around body temperature, I would think.
No, i myself have done the experiment and found that room temperature ball bounce as high as frozen and hot balls.A SMALL AMOUT COS THE RUBBER WILL CHANGE....i h8 n0000bz