That all depends on how hard you roll it. If you give it a light tap, it might not go anywhere.
no
Tons of tennis would like to how the ball bounces on different types of court surfaces. Becuase of the surface a player will have to change his/her gameplain to fit the surface. So basically anyone playing tennis seriously.
Because the hard surface doesn't absorb any of the energy of the tennis ball - thus the ball bounces higher than if it was dropped on a softer surface.
Since F= ma the much lighter tennis ball would receive much more acceleration and ,consequently, roll much farther, how far depend on the rolling surface. If they received the same initial velocity, they theoretically would roll the same distance bu it would again depend on the surface.
cement
Surface area of a sphere = 4*pi*radius2
The tennis ball. But do you know why? The anser to that is in the relationship between the fomula for a shere's volum and that of it's surface area. Area is a radius squared function whereas volume is a radius cubed function.
Because it has a soft surface.
Surface Area is the term used to describe the area of an object that is exposed. In other words, if you took a tennis ball, the outside of the ball is it's surface area. If you cut the tennis ball in half, the original outside part is still part of the surface area but now include the inside as well.
In theory, yes, however the largest effect of the temperature will be on the court. The hotter the surface is, the higher the ball will bounce.
was this on ur test
tennis