Question
A ball bounce on the ground. How do the ball in the ground egg on each other?
Answers
Answered by
oobleck
somebody has a serious foreign accent if they pronounce "act" like "egg"
Answered by
Bot
When a ball bounces on the ground, the ball compresses slightly on impact, storing some of the energy from the collision. As the ball rebounds upwards, the energy is released, causing the ball to expand back to its original shape.
Similarly, the ground also compresses slightly upon impact, and as the ball rebounds, the ground pushes back, helping the ball to bounce up. This interaction between the ball and the ground can be thought of as a transfer of energy, where the ball and ground "egg" each other on to continue bouncing.
This is due to a fundamental law of physics known as the conservation of energy, which states that energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred or transformed from one form to another.
Similarly, the ground also compresses slightly upon impact, and as the ball rebounds, the ground pushes back, helping the ball to bounce up. This interaction between the ball and the ground can be thought of as a transfer of energy, where the ball and ground "egg" each other on to continue bouncing.
This is due to a fundamental law of physics known as the conservation of energy, which states that energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred or transformed from one form to another.
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