Yes, they will if they are drooped from the same height and at the same time they will hit the ground at the same time
tHE BALL OF PAPER WOULD REACH THE GROUND FIRST. tHE RECTANGLE SHAPE WILL REACH LATER DUE TO THE AIR FOIL EFFECT(float down). iN A VACUUM THEY WOULD DROP THE SAME. Gravity is 9.8 m/s2.
In theory they'd land together at the same exact time, but in practice, air resistance would slow the paper ball down much more than it would the yarn.
In baseball, a ground out is an out in which a batter hits a ball on the ground and one of the Infielders catches it before it hits the ground and a ground out can also be an instance of a batter hitting a ball in which an Infielder fields a baseball and then throws to another Infielder in order to record an out as long as the batted baseball was hit on the ground.
the medium paper ball
It would help. The ball cannot touch the ground or go out of the field.
If we are talking in vaccum then both will have same acceleration.But if there is no vaccum then paper crumbled into a ball will have greater acceleration because air resistance will be less for it.
If the baseball hit the ground in foul territory, the ball is a foul ball. If the baseball hit the ground in fair territory, and the batter/runner is still in the batter's box when the baseball hits him, it is a foul ball. If the baseball hit the ground in fair territory and the batter/runner is out of the batter's box when the baseball hits him, the batter/runner is out and the ball is dead.
a baseball will
1,238 feet or miles the ball hit a train and the ball never hit the ground
~CORRECT ANSWER~ its: The sheet of paper, because it has more surface area.
There is no sacrifice ground ball in baseball because you don't try to sacrifice yourself to advance the runner on the ground ball. Also, on a bunt, it's hard to get the leading runner anyway, so the fielder most of the time goes for the batter at first. On a ground ball however, the fielder most of the time has an easy option for the lead runner as well as the batter.
In baseball, a hit ball that travels along the ground, as opposed to a fly ball that travels through the air.