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How does nature uses air resistance?

Updated: 9/23/2023
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Q: How does nature uses air resistance?
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Related questions

Which type of power plant uses the movement of air in nature to generate electricity?

wind


What is air resistance and what are the two factors that air resistance depends on?

Air Resistance is a force.


What force slows objects moving through the air?

Air resistance


How molecules in the air cause air resistance?

How molecules in the air cause air resistance?


Why does the oscillation of a pendulum gradually slows down after a certain interval of time?

Energy is gradually lost, through air resistance, and resistance in the string.Energy is gradually lost, through air resistance, and resistance in the string.Energy is gradually lost, through air resistance, and resistance in the string.Energy is gradually lost, through air resistance, and resistance in the string.


What is the force that opposes the motion of objects through air?

Air Resistance is the kinetic friction of the object's surface moving through the air. In aeronautical terms this is known as drag.


Is air resistance in a ball being thrown?

Yes, air resistance is on everything where there is air.


How does surface area affect air resistance?

air resistance affects


What is the relationship between air resistance and movement?

air resistance is cooler


When an object falls through the air encounters air resistance its overall speed will be than if it had not encountered air resistance?

The resistance do obstruct the object. The object always travel slower with air resistance. Air resistance is higher with velocity and the object falling through air would have a limited velocity that it can't go through.


What are the forces that affect falling objects?

Gravitation and air resistance. There could be some electrostatic or magnetic forces there too, but those would depend on the composition of the object and the nature of what's floating around in the environment, so they're not always there. Gravitation and air resistance are always there.


What are the forces that affect a falling object?

Gravitation and air resistance. There could be some electrostatic or magnetic forces there too, but those would depend on the composition of the object and the nature of what's floating around in the environment, so they're not always there. Gravitation and air resistance are always there.