In 2000, there was more than $5 billion in lost property due to fire
It appears that an estimated 4 ml of water was lost due to evaporation in each vial.
1,ooo (ml)
Nothing at all.
Yes, the height from which a ball is dropped affects how high it bounces back. The higher the drop height, the higher the bounce due to the increased potential energy the ball gains from the greater height.
As an object falls from a height above the ground, its potential energy decreases due to the lowering of its height. This potential energy is transformed into kinetic energy as the object speeds up. At the same time, some of the energy is also lost as heat and sound due to air resistance and other factors.
The 41st US President, George H. W. Bush, was 6'3" tall. However, he may have lost some height due to advancing age (he was born June 12, 1924).
approximately one jazzilion pounds
Yes, there is a relationship between the height the ball is dropped from and the height to which it bounces. In a simplified scenario, the higher the ball is dropped from, the higher it will bounce due to the conservation of energy and the conversion between potential and kinetic energy during the bounce.
it depends, boys have different weights due to their height.
Because they are at so much height that a person watching from down can't imagine how fast it is moving but due to the far distance it looks as it is standing.
Meat Loaf now stands 6' tall, but his height once peaked 6'2", but due to broken bones, illness and age, he has lost a couple of inches.