yes
If there was no gravity, the ball would not fall back down to the ground after being thrown. It would continue in a straight line with the same speed and direction it was thrown with until it was affected by another force.
An application of fertilizer near the base of the stems would be a "basel application" while applying the fertilizer over the surface of the ground would be a "top dressing" Some people would say that basal is in the soil, near the roots. Top dressing would be on top of the soil.
If the height from which the ball is thrown is increased, the time of flight of the ball would increase as well. This is because the initial velocity of the ball would be higher, leading to a longer time for the ball to reach the ground.
If the projectile is thrown with a greater velocity, it would travel further and potentially reach a higher peak height. The increased velocity would also result in a shorter flight time and the projectile hitting the ground with a greater impact force.
If a ground ball takes a bad hop and the batter is thrown out at first, he is out. If a ground ball takes a bad hop and the official scorekeeper feels the fielder would have thrown out the batter if the bad hop had not occurred, an error is charged to that fielder. If a ground ball takes a bad hop and the official scorekeeper feels the runner would have been safe at first anyway, it will be scored as a base hit with no error.
It would take less chewing to blow a big bubble.Because you are blowing not chewing.
answer: compare a plant not given fertilizer to a plant given fertilizer..
answer: compare a plant not given fertilizer to a plant given fertilizer..
It falls and splats on the ground! DA Genius!
Orthoclase contains Aluminium, which is not generally an element required for plant growth. The term "ground" is relative...feldspar would take a lot of grinding to be sufficiently ground. There are much easier/ more cost effective materials that could be used to fertilize that include nitrogen, potassium and various minerals that plants truly require. Like manure.
there is never to much chewing because you chew every single day to eat ,if we didn't chew we would chock on our food ,so...........there is no such thing as chewing to much.But if it was gum to much chewing would be 1 hour or so.
The patch of soil that is given fertilizer would be considered the experimental group because it is the group that receives the treatment being tested, which in this case is the fertilizer. The patch of soil that does not receive fertilizer would be the control group, used for comparison to see the effects of the fertilizer.