When a ball is dropped, the energy involved is primarily gravitational potential energy being converted into kinetic energy as the ball accelerates towards the ground. When the ball hits the ground, some of this kinetic energy is transferred to the ground as impact energy.
When a ball is dropped, its potential energy decreases due to the decrease in height, while its kinetic energy increases as it gains speed due to gravity pulling it downwards.
The type of energy involved in the motion of a top spinning is kinetic energy.
When something is dropped, potential energy is converted into kinetic energy as it falls due to gravity.
A moving ball has kinetic energy, which is energy associated with its motion.
A stationary ball has potential energy due to its position relative to the ground.
When a ball is dropped, its potential energy decreases due to the decrease in height, while its kinetic energy increases as it gains speed due to gravity pulling it downwards.
The type of energy involved in the motion of a top spinning is kinetic energy.
When something is dropped, potential energy is converted into kinetic energy as it falls due to gravity.
A moving ball has kinetic energy, which is energy associated with its motion.
mechanical energy
Super Ball. :)
The simple answer to this is that the rubber ball is more 'elastic' than the tennis ball and, assuming they are both dropped from the same height onto the same surface, the tennis ball 'loses' more energy than the rubber ball when it strikes the surface the ball is bouncing off. Of course no energy is truly ever lost but rather it is transferred or converted into other forms, in this case the energy will be converted into thermal energy (as the balls deform upon striking the surface due to friction within the materials), sound (the noise you hear when the ball strikes the surface) and to varying extents energy is transferred to the surface which the balls are striking. This energy 'loss' is the reason why the balls do not return to the height the balls were dropped from originally and the amount of energy 'loss' will vary with the type of ball dropped.
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.
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.
electricity
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.