How does a basketball under high pressure compare to a basketball under low pressure?
2 Answers
Mass, volume, internal pressure, and bounciness?
Explanation:
This actually wouldn't be the worst experiment to illustrate the properties of gases, in particular that gases are massive particles (i.e. particles that have mass not big particles). Take a flat basketball, measure its mass on a suitable scale, and then measure the mass when it has been properly inflated. I have not done the math (and at the moment I have not got the basketball), but I am willing to bet that there would be a measurable difference. If you do the experiment, you should post the results here.
INITIAL ASSUMPTIONS
When inflating a basketball, one pumps, let's say, air, into it. There exists a volume such that the basketball does not inflate further; let us call that
As
So, we are examining the time interval where
EXAMINING THE INCREASE IN PRESSURE
Since the pressure is increasing, once
As
FINAL INTERPRETATION
In the end, assuming that

