Yes, the surface affects the way the tennis ball bounces.
No, color does not affect how high a ball bounces.
Composition/density of the ball, gravity, and the hardness of the surface against which it was thrown.
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.
100% YES! The colder it is the less it bounces and the hotter it is the more it bounces.
Certainly, try bouncing a rubber ball on the beach. For that matter, try bouncing it off the ocean.
The height from which it falls, the smoothness of the surface off which it bounces and the elasticities of the ball and the surface from which it rebounds.
Short answer: no.
Its GREATLY affected by the surface it bounces on!If you bounce it on a soft or cushioned surface like a shag carpet, the carpet will absorb a lot of the impact, and the ball will not bounce as high.On the other hand, if you bounce it on concrete, the ball's fall is not cushioned nearly as much, and as a result, bounces much higher.
Egg's outer surface is rigid whereas the surface of basket ball is elastic in nature. So basket ball bounces but egg gets broken when they hit the floor.
A soccer ball bounces as the air particles in them hit and apply pressure at the ball, when it hits a surface, the pressure from the particles apply a force on the ball. Thus, making it bounce.
I am assuming you are talking about tennis. On a grass surface, the ball will bounce fast. On clay courts, the ball will bounce slower than on grass. On a hard court, the speed of the ball bounce will be in between clay and grass.