The ball would float and slowly fall to the surface of the moon due to the moon's weaker gravity compared to Earth.
The ball would follow a parabolic trajectory due to the gravitational pull of the moon. Since the moon has less gravity than Earth, the ball would travel farther and stay in the air longer before eventually falling back down.
You could kick a soccer ball the farthest on Mars due to its lower gravity, which is about 38% that of Earth's. This reduced gravitational pull would allow the ball to travel farther before hitting the ground. Additionally, Mars has a thinner atmosphere, resulting in less air resistance, further contributing to the distance the ball could travel. However, the lack of oxygen and harsh conditions would make it challenging to actually play soccer there.
The weight of the golf ball would be about 1/6th of its weight on Earth due to the moon's weaker gravity. The golf ball would also experience different air resistance on the moon because it has no atmosphere. Additionally, the golf ball's bounce and roll characteristics would be different on the moon's surface due to the lower gravity and lack of atmosphere.
The Sun is fairly round, so you can apply the formula for a sphere. The circumference is simply the diameter multiplied by pi. The radius of the sun is estimated to be about 432,450 miles, so the diameter is about 864,900 miles. That suggests a circumference of about 2,717,161 miles (2.7 million miles). But since the sun is a ball of gas, there is no definite solid surface to measure. Astronomers have to use an estimate based on their estimate of where the properties of the gases schange significantly enough to be considered a "surface."
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.
very far
a ball would roll better on one surface vs the other because one surface may have more friction the the other surface. For example a smooth surface like a polished wooden floor would have a ball roll better than a carpet where the hairs are stopping the progression of the ball.
Yes, a ball with more air will travel further because it has less surface area touching the ground, reducing friction and allowing it to roll more easily. Additionally, more air inside the ball increases its bounce, giving it more energy to travel further.
Neptune'sTopography, well since Neptune is just a giant ball of water, there really isn't a surface, once you would enter Neptune, you would go through miles of clouds to reach the surface, which would really be the Core of the planet
it will leave the surface of the other ball roughly 1/4 of the way down to the other end.
travel horizontally
If you kick a soccerball hard enough it would go 100 mph.
If a ball is spun counter clockwise, it would travel in the direction opposite of the spin. So, it would move to the right if you are looking at it from above.
If you roll a ball on a surface with very little friction, the ball will travel much further than if it were on a high-friction surface. The ball will roll smoothly with minimal resistance, conserving its initial momentum and velocity for longer distances.
no
The factors to consider here would be: 1) The surface texture of the ball, in other words, is it smooth or rough or dimpled like a golf ball? Drag is produced by the water passing over the ball's surface. 2) The material making up the ball's surface can be attractive or repellent to water molecules. Presumably a ball with an oily surface would spin better though I've never experimented.