A truck is heavier, has more mass. So at the same speed, the more massive object has more inertia.
A scientific word for inertia is Momentum, defined as mass times speed, and is equal to force times time. So a 1 kilogram mass operated on by a 1 Newton force for 1 second would move at 1 metre per second and would have a momentum of 1 kg-N.
Basically, inertia can be measured in units of mass, e.g. kilograms. Therefore, the object with more mass - this is also the object that is heavier - will have the greater inertia.
Not "force of inertia", just "inertia". The object with the larger mass has the larger inertia.
cricket ball
Basketball
Inertia is directly proportional to mass. Unless you mean rotational inertia, in which case it depends on the shape, but for two objects of the same shape (and mass distribution), the more massive always has higher inertia.
Yes, because a bowling ball is more dense than a soccer ball. A bowling ball is solid all throughout while a soccer ball has its outer layer, but has air inside of it. Hope that this answer helps! :)
Any amount of force can stop either kind of ball. But a greater force is required to stop a bowling ball than to stop a soccer ball IN THE SAME TIME, because the bowling ball has more mass, and therefore more momentum and more kinetic energy.
I think the truck has more inertia because ethe motorcycle seems less dense than the truck.
k
because cricket ball has greater mass
cricket ball
a Soccer ball
Soccer ball
Since the lightest tenpin bowling ball is currently 6 pounds and a table tennis ball is not even an ounce, the tenpin bowling ball is heavier.
It is likely that a golf ball will require more energy because the ball is more dense. When atoms are heavily packed together like that you will need more energy to get the item to respond.
the size does have something to do with the distance a soccer ball can travel.the bigger the ball, the more scoop you can get when you kick the ball. also, the more pumped a soccer ball is, the more force will be needed to kick it farther.
Basketball
b
Yes