sand grain
The object with the most gravitational force would be the bowling ball, as it has the greatest mass compared to a sand grain, marble, and tennis ball. Gravitational force increases with mass, so the object with the highest mass will have the strongest gravitational force.
Since the lightest tenpin bowling ball is currently 6 pounds and a table tennis ball is not even an ounce, the tenpin bowling ball is heavier.
Bowling, curling, and tennis
the table tennis ball
B. A bowling ball has the greatest inertia because it has the most mass compared to the other objects listed. Inertia is directly related to an object's mass, with greater mass resulting in greater inertia.
a bowling ball
I believe it does. If you imagine it with a bowling ball and two tennis balls, when you roll one tennis ball into another stationary tennis ball, it rolls away, but not that far. Now repeat the same experiment with a bowling ball and a tennis ball, the result is much clearer as to which moved the stationary tennis ball more. The bowling ball did as it has a larger mass and size.
An alley in tennis is the area between the single's line and double's line.
tennis ten pin bowling
tennis, golf, curling, bowling
The bowling ball, because it's the heaviest and thus not as affected by air resistance
soccer, tennis
Tennis, bowling, archery.
The tennis ball
· ace (baseball, tennis) · ad court (tennis) · Adams Division (hockey) · address (golf) · advance a runner (baseball) · advantage (tennis) · air ball (basketball) · all-purpose yardage (football) · alley (bowling, tennis) · alpine skiing (skiing) · American Bowling Congress (bowling) · anchor (bowling, track & field) · anchor leg (track & field) · approach (track & field) · approach shot (golf, tennis) · apron (golf) · archery · arena football (football) · arrow (archery, darts) · arrows (bowling) · arrowhead (archery) · arm guard (archery) · assist (baseball, basketball, hockey) · at bat (baseball) · attack (bicycling) · audible (football) · Australian Open (tennis) · auto racing · automatic first down (football) · automatic pinsetter (bowling) · away (golf)
Either bowling,swimming,tennis,or golf
Tennis, rugby, squash, bowling, cricket, volleyball and pool.
The sport of tennis.
Because in 1954 they used paper clips and bowling balls, so the population after raquets and tennis balls rent to 99.9%.
You burn about 5.3 calories per minute playing Wii Tennis.