no it wouldn't it would if u leave it out for a week
the basketball will most likely bounce higher on a flat surface
A flat ball doesn't have a lot of air in it, so it doesn't bounce that well, where as a full basketball has less resistance, and therefore bounces higher. Basically, the difference is the amount of air in the basketball.
a flat surface.
a flat surface
It is because of the gas laws, Boyle's Law and Charles Law. the heat made the oxygen atoms (o2) move faster. They hit the insides of the ball with more force, making an impression of the ball being inflated.
Not really, unless the basketball court has walls around it. And even then, a basketball court is pretty small - you would want a larger space to hear a noticeable echo. One of the best echos I used to get was when I worked at a large warehouse at night - if I was outside, a good distance (about 500 feet, say) away from the large, flat, 3-story high exterior wall of the warehouse, if I clapped loudly, I could hear an echo.
No, because the full basketball includes the mass of the air, unless you don't include the air, then they are the same.
cumulonimbus clouds. They are puffy that appear to rise up from a flat bottom.
Adidas's.
Same as a football.
2 dolla flat
When Titanic hit the iceberg, the weather was extraordinary. The sea was so calm and flat that night, it was like being On a Sea of Glass. The night was completely moonless and there was not a cloud in the sky,