It all depends on the air resistance...
Nylon was used to make materials in the war such as parachutes and ropes.
Materials commonly used to make parachutes include nylon, silk, polyester, and Kevlar. These materials are lightweight, strong, and have the necessary flexibility to provide a safe descent when deployed. The choice of material often depends on factors such as desired performance, durability, and cost.
Due to "inertia" and the nature of "mass", heavier particles require more energy to change their velocity. It takes more energy to make them move faster or slower or to change their "direction".
nylon threads
To make your sketches slower or make one thing go slower is to copy it a little times. That's how you make go slower
This does not ask a question or make a statement that is easy to understand.
if an object is lightr it will fall slower because gravity wont take it down as fast if it is heavier it will make the gravity pull it down faster
In 1941 right when pearl harbor happended. They used the material nylon to make these parachutes during the great depression also.
silk is no longer used for making parachutes. It was a good material before nylon came along, but no parachutes are made from silk anymore. Not for decades. <><><><> When it WAS used, it was because it was very light, extremely strong, was not bulky, and could be woven in a very tight weave.
I think that they currently use nylon, but they used to use silk
What do you mean, make it faster? In a vacuum, light travels at only one speed. There is no way to make it faster or slower. In other materials, light is usually slower. There are instances where it is actually measured to be faster, but it is generally believed that this can't be used to transfer matter, energy, or information, faster than the speed of light.
No It Does Not.