It gets hot.
Yes. I think you can microwave just about anything that will fit inside one. Now, before you do this, the question should be, "Is is safe to microwave a Golf ball?". To this I would answer that it would totally depend on the time, 10 secs. vs. 5 mins., to which I would answer that the former would probably do nothing and latter could be potentially harmful and possibly dangerous. I would not do it.
Yes, you can but the outside of the ball ( the hair ) would melt.
Even the inside core could start to melt.
I wouldn't do it if I were you
They build the tennis ball around the air, really! Actually, the tennis ball is made in two halves and then heat wielded together to form the finished ball.
The reason why the tennis ball bounces higher is because when heat is applied the tennis ball expands making it more like a fly away football 'makes it lighter' when it is bounced it hits the floor and had more air in it so therefore bounces higher.
It explodes in 39.2 seconds after being heated at 375 degree Fahrenheit in an oven. VERY messy.
The first bit of methanol to vaporise will fling methanol all over the inside of your microwave.
It will kill the sperm in the fluid called semen.
The heat will cause the air inside the table-tennis ball (ping pong ball) to expand and so push the dint out.
If the ball has a dent in it and you heat the ball in hot water it will come back to its original shape.
The transfer of energy from your racket and the ground to the ball causes its particles to move faster, which causes heat.
Yes, because the gas molecules in the tennis ball expand. When the molecules expand there energy increases.
The heat cause the air inside the ball to expand and undent the ball
Crayons are made of wax. Wax melts in heat. That's your answer.
A tennis ball may deteriorate for a number of reasons, including usage (i.e., being hit) and the environment (i.e., heat and humidity). Left alone, a tennis ball would, eventually, lose air through osmosis of the rubber core and felt coverings. When struck, the air is forced out little by little. Heat forces air to escape more quickly, and the effects of humidity and being struck wear out the felt covering, as well as causing tiny cracks and holes in the felt and rubber from which air will escape.