
-SwItCh-
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

bigshmul
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

Chris
|
10 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

Cook1313
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

Cook1313
|
10 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

Teacher
|
75 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

Teacher
|
25 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

kirk.g.olson
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

Hazel
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

elektra09
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

diered
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

diered
|
25 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

N/A
|
10 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

shardul
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

jrowe100
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

Drachemeister
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source: First off, if the collision with the ball is elastic (no energy loss) the brick would bounce up to exactly 1 meter, not almost one meter. Meaning the question is flawed. Meaning any answer given is false.
|

DTM
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

DTM
|
25 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

hockeyanimal18
|
10 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

duwie
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

fairhurstg
|
25 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

joeytrowbridge@hotmail.com
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

brenmoir
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

rocketman
|
10 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

Donme
|
25 cm
15 years ago
Source: or about 50cm
|

kcaj
|
10 cm
15 years ago
Source:
|

Nirav18
|
1 m
15 years ago
Source:
|

rgodwinjr
|
1 m
14 years ago
Source:
|

Andrej
|
1 m
13 years ago
Source:
|