When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bouncing ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouncing_ball

    The physics of a bouncing ball concerns the physical behaviour of bouncing balls, particularly its motion before, during, and after impact against the surface of another body. Several aspects of a bouncing ball's behaviour serve as an introduction to mechanics in high school or undergraduate level physics courses.

  3. Coefficient of restitution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coefficient_of_restitution

    The COR is a property of a pair of objects in a collision, not a single object. If a given object collides with two different objects, each collision has its own COR. When a single object is described as having a given coefficient of restitution, as if it were an intrinsic property without reference to a second object, some assumptions have been made – for example that the collision is with ...

  4. Bouncy ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouncy_ball

    A superball or power ball is a bouncy ball composed of a type of synthetic rubber (originally a hard elastomer polybutadiene alloy named Zectron) invented in 1964, which has a higher coefficient of restitution (0.92) than older balls such as the Spaldeen so that when dropped from a moderate height onto a level hard surface, it will bounce nearly all the way back up.

  5. Absolute rotation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_rotation

    Bouncing ball in a rotating space station: The objective reality of the ball bouncing off the outer hull is confirmed both by a rotating and by a non-rotating observer, hence the rotation of the space station is an "absolute", objective fact regardless of the chosen frame of reference.

  6. Inelastic collision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inelastic_collision

    A bouncing ball captured with a stroboscopic flash at 25 images per second. Each impact of the ball is inelastic, meaning that energy dissipates at each bounce. Ignoring air resistance, the square root of the ratio of the height of one bounce to that of the preceding bounce gives the coefficient of restitution for the ball/surface impact.

  7. Elastic collision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elastic_collision

    In physics, an elastic collision is an encounter between two bodies in which the total kinetic energy of the two bodies remains the same. In an ideal, perfectly elastic collision, there is no net loss of kinetic energy into other forms such as heat, noise, or potential energy.

  8. Game of the Day: Bounce Out - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2013-01-12-bounce-out-game-of...

    Today's Game of the Day will have you swapping and bouncing balls in a timed race to the finish. Bounce Out from Gamehouse offers level based play that challenges you with lining up three or more ...

  9. Talk:Bouncing ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Bouncing_ball

    The physics of bouncing balls has been mostly used as a teaching tool, since in the simplified version it illustrates projectile motion rather well, and you can talk about energy losses at impact and so on. This is done at the high-school level and first year university level.