Yes, air inside the ball has mass because air is made up of molecules which have mass. When air is trapped inside the ball, it contributes to the overall weight of the ball.
Yes, air inside a ball is matter because matter is anything that has mass and takes up space. Since air has mass and fills the space inside the ball, it meets the criteria to be considered matter.
The air inside a ball is considered to be matter because it has mass and occupies space. Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space, and since the air inside the ball meets these criteria, it is classified as matter.
Yes, air is matter wherever it is found. Since it is occupying space (trapped in ball), will have some mass and we could feel the air inside it by simply keeping it on our hands..It is also justified by the definition of MATTER..
Yes, it does. Actually, i don't think it does. It should make the ball heavier. A ball typically has a constant volume. Adding more air into it doesn't change the volume, but the pressure increases, and you are adding mass into the ball. Adding mass into the ball does make it heavier, and it becomes denser as well. Of course, the change in mass is quite small - you'd have to pump 1.3m3 of air into the ball to increase its mass by 1 kg
Air inside a val is considered matter if that is what you are asking….
The air inside a ball is considered to be matter because it has mass and occupies space. Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space, and since the air inside the ball meets these criteria, it is classified as matter.
Yes, air inside a ball is matter because matter is anything that has mass and takes up space. Since air has mass and fills the space inside the ball, it meets the criteria to be considered matter.
Yes, air is matter wherever it is found. Since it is occupying space (trapped in ball), will have some mass and we could feel the air inside it by simply keeping it on our hands..It is also justified by the definition of MATTER..
Yes the air inside a ball is matter. Matter is anything that takes up space and has mass (solid liqud or gas), the air in the ball takes up space.
Yes, it does. Actually, i don't think it does. It should make the ball heavier. A ball typically has a constant volume. Adding more air into it doesn't change the volume, but the pressure increases, and you are adding mass into the ball. Adding mass into the ball does make it heavier, and it becomes denser as well. Of course, the change in mass is quite small - you'd have to pump 1.3m3 of air into the ball to increase its mass by 1 kg
Air inside a val is considered matter if that is what you are asking….
It will increase the total volume, but it will hardly affect total mass. Remember the definition of density as mass / volume.
As air fills the basketball, the pressure expands outward to make the outside of the ball feel harder. The valve on the outside of the ball allows the pump to put air in prevents air from escaping.
Air does not get in the ball. The air inside the ball expands when it gets warmer.
an inflated because it takes up more room than a deflated one It depends on how you define the basketball. If you define it as just the rubber, then the mass does not change when it is inflated. If you consider the air inside the ball to be part of the ball then adding more air adds more mass. Mass is "stuff". Air has mass because air is stuff.
The temperature of the ball does not affect the surrounding/outside air, but it does affect the air inside the ball.
it is in fact regular air inside the ball. the smell is because its contained for so long the air has become stale.