A ball that goes outside the 1st and 3rd baselines in Baseball is considered foul. If a batter hits a foul ball, it is considered a strike, except when a player already has two strikes.
Newton's laws of motion are fundamental principles that govern how objects move. In the context of lacrosse, these laws apply to the motion of the ball, the players, and the equipment. For example, the first law explains why a ball remains at rest until acted upon by a player, the second law describes how a player's force influences the acceleration of the ball, and the third law relates to the reaction when a player shoots or passes the ball.
This is an example of Newton's second law of motion, which states that the acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the force applied to it and inversely proportional to its mass. This law is represented by the equation F = ma, where F is the force applied, m is the mass of the object, and a is the acceleration.
An outside force, gravity, pulls the car down the ramp building up speed. At the bottom of the ramp law 1 kicks in. The car continues to move in a straight line.
1st make sure your batteries are still working on the outside receiver. Then go inside and take the batteries out of your inside receiver (the clock). Put the new batteries in the clock and wait for the outside temperature to set. DO NOT SET THE TIME or anything else until the signal is received from the outside temp. If you get frustrated, take the outside transmitter inside and when it blinks the red light that is when the signal is sent, so wait for that. Hopefully this works for you.
The net force acting on a ball thrown in the air with upward velocity is the force of gravity acting downwards. Gravity causes the ball to accelerate towards the ground. At the highest point of its trajectory, the net force is zero since the upward velocity is momentarily halted before the ball begins to fall back down.
A ball that lands outside of the white lines or a ground ball that goes foul before reaching 3ed/1st base
if a batted ball bounces in the infield and crosses over any part of 1st or 3rd base it is to be ruled a fair ball. If the ball has not bounced on the infield, the call is made depending on where it first touches the ground. if in fair territory or on the line it is a fair ball, outside the line is a foul ball. Any ball that physically hits 1st or 3rd base is a fair ball
Anything not inside the 1st and 3rd baselines and anything that hits home plate.
it is called " a ball" 4 balls and the batter walks to 1st base.
If this all takes place before the ball reaches 1st or 3rd base, you have to wait until the ball comes to rest or is touched by a defensive player. Then, if it is in fair territory at that time, it is a fair ball. If it is in foul territory at that tome, it is a foul ball. If a fly ball hits outside the foul line beyond 1st base or 3rd base, it is a foul ball.
The batted ball must first either land in fair territory, be touched while in fair territory, or go over the outfield fence in fair territory to be determined a fair ball. Any ball that is fair before the 1st or 3rd base bag and goes foul without being touched is a foul ball, however, a ball that goes past 1st or 3rd and is fair can then go into foul territory and still remain a fair ball
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If it goes into foul territory before it passes 1st or 3rd base, it's a foul ball. Just like a grounder or bunt that starts fair and rolls foul. If it goes into foul territory past the base it is a fair, live ball.
NO... anyball landing foul is a foul ball and is a dead ball ...Clarification:the way i read this question is "if a thrown ball hits a runner and goes out of play can the runner advance?" -- If this is the question you are asking, then, yes, a runner can advance on a thrown ball that goes out of play. Runner will be allowed to advance 1 base after the ball goes out of play. The only time this wouldn't be the case is if the runner was running to 1st and the ball hits him and it is deemed interference, he would then be called out.The question is a bit unclear, so it really depends on what you are asking
Since 1st and 3rd base coaches must remain outside the foul lines on the field of play, any ball that hits a base coach is, by definition, foul.
If a batted ball hits the mound and then makes it into foul territory before going past 3rd or 1st base and without being touched and without stopping then it would be a foul. If it goes into foul territory after passing 1st or 3rd base, then it is fair. Likewise, if the ball stops moving or is touched by a fielder in fair territory, it is also a fair ball and in play. The key is where the ball stops moving. If the ball stops in fair territory (without having been touched in foul territory), it is a fair ball. If the ball stops in foul territory (without having been touched in fair territory or advancing beyond 1st or 3rd base), it it a foul ball, regardless of the route it took to get there.
It's still foul cause the ball was hit in foul territory. Whether a ball is fair or foul is based on the position of the ball when it is touched. Since the ball was touched when the ball was in foul territory, it would be a foul ball.