A ball at rest has potential energy due to its position relative to a reference point, such as the ground. This potential energy can be converted into kinetic energy when the ball is in motion.
A moving ball has kinetic energy, which is energy associated with its motion.
-- A ball on a shelf has gravitational potential energy with respect to the floor. -- A ball in motion has kinetic energy. -- A ball of fire has heat energy. -- A ball of trinitrotoluene has chemical energy. -- A ball of charged pith has static electric energy. -- A ball of U235 has nuclear energy.
The form of energy a bouncy has is, sound energy,elastic energy,and gravitational energy.
A stationary ball has potential energy due to its position relative to the ground.
A squashed ball has potential energy stored in the compressed structure of the ball. When the ball is released, this potential energy is converted into kinetic energy as the ball bounces back to its original shape and gains speed.
A moving ball has kinetic energy, which is energy associated with its motion.
-- A ball on a shelf has gravitational potential energy with respect to the floor. -- A ball in motion has kinetic energy. -- A ball of fire has heat energy. -- A ball of trinitrotoluene has chemical energy. -- A ball of charged pith has static electric energy. -- A ball of U235 has nuclear energy.
Super Ball. :)
The form of energy a bouncy has is, sound energy,elastic energy,and gravitational energy.
A stationary ball has potential energy due to its position relative to the ground.
A squashed ball has potential energy stored in the compressed structure of the ball. When the ball is released, this potential energy is converted into kinetic energy as the ball bounces back to its original shape and gains speed.
The potential energy of the rubber ball is converted into kinetic energy as it falls. When the ball hits the ground, some of the energy is absorbed by the ball and the ground, while the rest is converted to other forms such as sound and heat.
As a ball falls, its potential energy decreases as it converts to kinetic energy. As it moves closer to the ground, its kinetic energy increases at the expense of potential energy.
A ball at rest contains only potential energy. A ball in motion contains almost all kinetic energy. But it gets tricky here. A free falling ball that has not yet reached terminal velocity has no potential energy. That energy is being given up to kinetic energy. Once the ball reaches terminal velocity in Earth's atmosphere, air resistance holds back further conversion of potential energy to kinetic.
Gravitational potential energy before the ball is bounced which changes to kinetic energy and then to elastic potential energy.
Potential Energy. Because it is the energy at rest =))))
Ki.