1.39 Ns up
no,due to physics the rebound weight and energy
Yes - the greater the height an item dropped the resulting bounce is higher
Yes
i have a very low kerb but have been told that i still neeed a drop kerb, does anyone know if the kerb is ok if under a certain height?
int height; print("Enter height"); height=getString();
Increasing the height from which it is released increases the height to which it rebounds.
The height to which a dropped ball rebounds is typically significantly greater than the height of the ball. Also, incidentally, the height of the ball usually doesn't change during the event, and remains equal to its original height.
31 m/s
Zero meters
75%
The higher the height the ball is dropped from, the higher the height it will bounce to.
Energy can be looked at at the apex of the ball's bounce and is proportional to h. Therefore, the energy retained between the first two bounces = 1.3/1.6 = 81% Therefore, it loses about 19% of its energy per bounce. To lose 90% means to retain 10% of the energy 0.8125^x=.1 x=log(.1)/log(.8125) round up 12 rebounds
Yes - the greater the height an item dropped the resulting bounce is higher
Yes - the greater the height an item dropped the resulting bounce is higher
Yes - the greater the height an item dropped the resulting bounce is higher
That refers to the height from which something is dropped.
Yes.