Although there is no preset or manufacture recommended temperature at which tennis balls may be stored, they should be stored at room temperatures of between 65 and 75 degrees, with 68 being the ideal, as that is the temperature mandated for testing tennis balls by the International Tennis Federation (the ruling body for tennis; refer to the ITF link, below).
The differences are that a tennis ball is green and furry, and a cricket ball is red and tough.
No.
The tennis ball is made from a mixture felt-rubber; the internal gas is air.
when you run and try to hit the tennis ball
The ball keeps moving forward because of its momentum, which is not a force.
coldest
you don't
The temperature of the ball does not affect the surrounding/outside air, but it does affect the air inside the ball.
It the ball has air in it, then an increase of temperature will increase the pressure within the ball, over the short term. Over the long term, all pressurized tennis balls lose pressure. If the ball is the pressureless type, it has no air to be affected by temperature.
The ball becomes super charged when hot and better to play tennis with when cold
The Temperature of a body tends toward the temperature of its surroundings. It depends where the tennis ball is. If it is in a place of 10 degrees Celsius it will be 10 degrees Celsius after a long enough time of being there.
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.
the hotter the tennis ball is the higher it will bounce because the molecules are moving faster and the pressure is decreasing. Opposite when it is cold.
Tenis ball
The heated, then the room temperature, then the frozen ball. It's the heated because of how fast the molecules are moving. :)
a tennis ball
A tennis ball.