You would need the mass of the rain drop(s) you are calculating and since it is falling downwards (not including any interfering forces) it would be falling at a constant acceleration of 9.8ms squared, so using the formula force = mass X acceleration you would be able to get the resultant force
You cannot calculate force with only speed.
No. What brings rain down, gravity, is a force. Rain is simply water being pulled down by gravity in little drops from clouds in the sky.
It depends on what else you know. If you know the mass and can measure the acceleration, you can use that to calculate force, but there are other ways to calculate force.
You calculate peak force by multiplying Mass times Velocity divided by time
How you calculate the input force that you apply to bike pedals involves multiplying the force by the distance the object moves in the direction of the force. This is a part of the law of the lever.
The rain is an angry force is an example of a metaphor.
The rain is an angry force is an example of a metaphor.
You cannot calculate force with only speed.
No. What brings rain down, gravity, is a force. Rain is simply water being pulled down by gravity in little drops from clouds in the sky.
It depends on what else you know. If you know the mass and can measure the acceleration, you can use that to calculate force, but there are other ways to calculate force.
You calculate peak force by multiplying Mass times Velocity divided by time
we say it is a balanced force
no you can not
Newtons (N)
How you calculate the input force that you apply to bike pedals involves multiplying the force by the distance the object moves in the direction of the force. This is a part of the law of the lever.
your hair gets wet in the rain because the vapour of the water and its force
like rain or weather