Bowling Ball
The object with the most gravitational force would be the bowling ball, as it has the greatest mass compared to a sand grain, marble, and tennis ball. Gravitational force increases with mass, so the object with the highest mass will have the strongest gravitational force.
The experimental setup I envision is as follows: you get a sheet of melamine, stick it in the middle of the school gym, set one end on a sawhorse to create the slope, put the two balls at the top of the slope, let go of them at the same time and measure to see which one goes farther once it gets out onto the gym floor. Right? Because of the weights of the two balls, the bowling ball will travel farther. It can store more energy from gravity.
1)the object's speed may be increased provided the force is in the same direction of motion 2)speed may decrease if force is opposite to direction of motion 3)the direction of motion may change when force is at any angle to motion's direction simple experiment with a rolling tennis ball can provide a better insight to above 3 situations...
Mass has two significant consequences, which are gravity and inertia. Without gravity we would have no planets or stars, since interstellar gas clouds would never condense. And without inertia, it would be really hard to play tennis.
Tennis balls are lighter than cricket balls. Therefore less mass. If a tennis ball travels at the same speed its momentum (mass x velocity) is lower. Therefore less momentum an easier to stop. Short answer, less mass and same speed means less momentum
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.
The object with the most gravitational force would be the bowling ball, as it has the greatest mass compared to a sand grain, marble, and tennis ball. Gravitational force increases with mass, so the object with the highest mass will have the strongest gravitational force.
Bowling, curling, and tennis
sand grain
the table tennis ball
yes, the physics of inertia apply everywhere that inertia will be
a bowling ball
Inertia always opposes a change in motion. Which means starting, moving, turning,stopping, everything. Inertia is a property of mass, and everything has mass, soeverything has inertia that needs to be overcome if you want to move that>something
I believe it does. If you imagine it with a bowling ball and two tennis balls, when you roll one tennis ball into another stationary tennis ball, it rolls away, but not that far. Now repeat the same experiment with a bowling ball and a tennis ball, the result is much clearer as to which moved the stationary tennis ball more. The bowling ball did as it has a larger mass and size.
tennis ten pin bowling
tennis, golf, curling, bowling
An alley in tennis is the area between the single's line and double's line.