If the ball travels off the back of the court in tennis, the point is awarded to the opponent.
When you bounce a ball, it compresses against the surface it hits, storing potential energy. As it then moves back up, that potential energy is converted into kinetic energy, causing the ball to bounce back up. The height of the bounce is determined by the elasticity of the ball and the surface it hits.
When you bounce a ball, the kinetic energy of the moving ball is transformed into elastic potential energy as the ball compresses. As the ball rebounds back up, this potential energy is converted back into kinetic energy. Some energy is also lost as heat and sound during the bouncing process.
The initial velocity of the ball is 16 feet per second when thrown upward. The velocity decreases as the ball travels upward due to gravity until it reaches its peak and starts to fall back down.
As the ball travels up, its velocity decreases until it reaches a maximum height and then starts to fall back down due to gravity. The initial velocity of the ball will determine how high it goes before falling back down.
Yes, it does. The further up a ball is placed on a ramp, the greater the distance the ball travels. If launched from a lower starting position, then the ball shall travel a shorter distance. This is all true under Newton's second law, which states that Force = mass * acelaration(F= m*a). If the ball has to move something, i.e. a cup, then the rule applies as well.
the ball has gone out so it will be a sideline pass, to the other team. if you cant see clearly who it came off it will be a toss up.
A back court violation when the offensive player with the ball steps behind the half court line after crossing it.
There is a "back-court violation" This happens when a back-court player or a Libero, jumps after the attack line to hit the ball or if a Libero spikes a ball that is over the height of the net.
The ball speeds up as it travels to the ground as gravity pulls it down to make it go fast.
The ball speeds up as it travels to the ground as gravity pulls it down to make it go fast.
it becomes bowled and its out
yes you can
No. A backcourt violation is when a back row player attacks the ball from above the height of the net while in front of or having jumped from in front of the 10 foot line.
There are several violations in basketball that are called back court violations:1) The offensive team has 8 seconds (NBA) or 10 seconds (college) to bring the ball from the back court to the front court after inbounding. If the offensive team cannot advance the ball from the back court to the front court in the time allotted, a back court violation is called.2) Once the offensive team brings the ball across the mid court line, they may not pass the ball to a teammate who is behind the mid court line. This is also commonly called an 'over and back violation'.3) Should an offensive player lose control of the ball in the front court, due to their own error, and the ball cross the mid court line back into the back court , the offensive team cannot regain possession of the ball without having a back court violation (over and back) called.
no, that would be a back court violation one may not go across the mid line of the court and then go back The violation only occurs if the ball has crossed into the front court
there's no count for back court violation. back court violation is when you hold the ball in the fore court and you step back beyond the half court line is back court violation. maybe you are meaning the 8 seconds violation wherein you are not allowed to stay in the back court with the ball for more than 8 seconds.
back court.