Ha Ha... No, Jupiter has an atmosphere filled with storms so the ball would be destroyed. Plus Jupiter is way bigger than earth so the bigger the mass the more weight so we wouldn't know how much the ball would weigh.
it would
3 earths
Jupiter is more massive then Venus, so Jupiter has more gravity. (the more massive a planet is, the more gravitational force it has on other objects)
It would sink into the planet and eventually break up due to gravitational forces and extreme pressures. Some of Jupiters interior may be ejected by the collision.
Despite freezing temperatures and toxic gas the pressure deeper in Jupiters atmosphere would crush you to the size of a grapefruit. No man made device could survive either.
no
Jupiter dosent have a surface. And if it did, you wouldn't be able to see the moons because of the 30 mile thick clouds!
A tennis ball will bounce the highest because it is smaller. The smaller amount of mass that it has the more it will bounce and the higher it would get. For example, when you put air into a ball the more mass it builds up but, when the ball is flat it would not bounce.
Do NOT microwave a tennis ball. It will melt the rubber and the fumes emitting will temporarily blur your pupils. It does not increase bounce, it only melts.
because it looses all its air so it wont be able to bounce as high as it would normally do.
It would be a lot harder to play because it wouldn't bounce, so hopefully that won't happen.
Yes. Let's say it bounces on cement. It bounces high and hits the surface perfectly. However, if you were to bounce it on something like carpet, it would either bounce less high, or not bounce at all. This would be due to the fact that the carpet has padding so the ball would not be able to push off of a hard surface because carpet isn't usually hard.
Hot. Personal experiments have shown that temperatures below 25°C make the ball bounce less. From 25°C and upwards there aren't any greater changes in height of bounce. The balls bounce almost the same.
A basketball will bounce more on concrete because it is a flatter surface then carpet and grass
Your question is worded weird but, if the court is made of clay, the ball would bounce better than a dirt court, so it affects how well the ball bounces
One might compare this to various objects, such as a pillow and a brick. Say you threw a tennis ball against a pillow, it wouldnt bounce very far. However if you threw it at the brick, it would bounce further. By your question i assume you mean to say the effects on how it bounces. So to answer the question, if the ball is flat, it would bounce less, as it is a softer surface, (much like the pillow) and if it is harder, it would bounce more and higher, (much like the ball off of the brick). Not sure if this helped!
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.