Wicked Mega Bounce XTR -DS

£9.9
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Wicked Mega Bounce XTR -DS

Wicked Mega Bounce XTR -DS

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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Exploration and Investigation: We obtain information and learn about the world through exploring objects and investigating how things work. Conducting scientific investigations, engaging in hands-on experiences, and asking open-ended questions can foster greater conceptual understanding of our world. three additional balls (of different texture and size). Some suggestions: a tennis ball, ping pong ball, Nerf ball etc. What we really love about the SkyBall is that it isn't tiny (and thus super easy to lose) like other "super balls". The SkyBall has a 4" diameter (about twice the size of a tennis ball), so it's easy to locate when bouncing around like a mad man.

To make bouncing polymer balls, follow these steps: Label one cup “Borax Solution” and the other “Ball Mixture.” Pour 2 tablespoons of warm water and 1/2 teaspoon of borax powder into the cup labeled “Borax Solution.” Stir the mixture to dissolve the borax. Add food coloring if desired. Who invented bouncy balls? The Mega Bounce XTR is the bounciest ball of them all! Drop it onto a hard surface and it’ll bounce 85% of its original height (a basketball manages a measly 56%)! Throw it down as hard as you can and watch it soar way higher than a 2 story building…it really is MEGA! Why can’t a ball bounce forever?Bounce several of the balls, one at a time. The balls that do not bounce higher than that string should then be eliminated from the competition. Have the students raise the string up a little higher and conduct the experiment with the remaining balls. Any balls that do not make it over that height are eliminated. This elastic potential energy is why the ball is able to bounce, or rebound. After the ball rebounds, the elastic potential energy is transformed into kinetic energy, but it will never possess as much kinetic energy as during its original fall. The ball will never be able to rebound to its original height. Collect data: e.g., ask questions, make observations, perform simple measurements using standard and/or non-standard units of measure, make estimations, etc. Experimentation: Sometimes more can be learned by actually doing something to things and taking note of what happened. We use scientific testing and experimentation to seek reasons and evidence in an attempt to prove or disprove our ideas and hypotheses, to discover new information, and to draw conclusions. Take note of a variety of properties and describe as accurately as possible (e.g., number, shape, size, length, color, texture, weight, motion, temperature, other physical characteristics, etc.).

In 2002, the Fevernova was a lighter ball and pitched as ”the most precise ball ever made”. In reality, it was one of the bounciest. But it was perhaps 2010’s Jabulani that became the biggest talking point. Adidas created a ball that was one of the roundest ever made, thanks to the use of eight panels stitched together. Players such as Spanish goalkeeper Iker Casillas hated the ball because of the unpredictable way in which it moved through the air, while strikers seemed to like hitting the thing.If you drop the basketball, the force of gravity pulls it down, and as the ball falls, its potential energy is converted to kinetic energy. … This is because the basketball had an inelastic collision with the ground. After a few bounces, it stops bouncing completely. The energy has left the ball! Does a glass ball bounce higher than a rubber ball?

Use prior knowledge and experiences to develop specific questions that will lead to information, solutions, and answers.

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Now bring out another ball. Based on the weight of the other balls, ask them if they think the new ball is lighter than both, heavier than both or in between. Ask students how they could gain more information about how heavy each object is before weighing it on the scale. ( They could hold the objects and feel them.) Lead a discussion about the experiments you conducted today. Ask students to discuss some of the things that they learned through the process. The ball that doesn’t bounce is made of a special kind of rubber, called butyl rubber. Butyl rubber is synthetic, or manmade, rubber that absorbs the kinetic energy from the ball falling. Butyl rubber used in athletic shoes can help absorb the impact of your feet as they hit the ground. On average, the rubber bouncy ball will bounce the highest, followed by the ping pong ball. The marble will bounce the least high. What is the bounciest trampoline? FIFA will be hoping these innovations will add to the beautiful game and not detract from it. While there have been some welcome changes to the World Cup ball over the years, including in 1986 when the Azteca became the first synthetic ball be used, some tweaks were rather less well received.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

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