The basketball do not bounce back to the same height after each drop due to the fact of loss of kinetic energy.
Explanation:
When the basketball or any ball is dropped off from a certain height it falls down under the influence of gravity with the kinetic energy which has been transferred to the ball with hand by dribble.
When the basketball hits the ground with the kinetic energy, it loses some of the energy to the ground and then with the action reaction pair with the ground, is bounced back but with lower energy to a lower height.
Hi!
So if you drop a basketball from a higher height, it has more time to gather more energy, which it then forces against the ground and causes the ball to bounce.
Hope this helps! Sorry I didn't really use any technical terms!
Speed = (distance covered) / (time to cover the distance)
Speed = (121 m) / (30 sec)
Speed = 4.03 m/s (about 9 mph ... pretty slow for a bobsled)
When waves travel across strings, the larger the tension of the string the faster the velocity of the wave. This is because of the equation:
v = the square root of (T/(m/L)) where T is the tension, m the mass of the string, and L the length of the string
Hope this helps!
It’s
A). wave velocity increases
Answer is 8 !
~Sarah Robinsen