The speed of an object in free fall near the earth's surface is always 9.8 meters (32.2 feet) per second more
than it was one second earlier.
9m/s2
Such an object is said to be in "free fall".
9.8
every second the velocity increases by 9.8m/s per second per second
An object is said to be in free fall if the only force that acts on it is gravity.
9m/s2
The mass is irrelevant. If the object is in free fall (that is, air resistance can be neglected), an object will fall 4.9 meters in one second.
Such an object is said to be in "free fall".
Every second, it falls farther and faster than it fell in the previous second.
Depend on if you are talking a "free-fall" or an object descending the side of a mountain. Free-fall all objects regardless of weight fall at the same rate of speed (36 feet per second).
yes, objects fall at a rate of 9.8m/swith acceleration. For every second in free fall you must add 9.8m/s to get the acceleration of an object.
If their is no air resistance, it will go faster and faster, at a rate of 9.8 (meters / second) / second.
An object is in free fall when only gravity and air resistance (drag) are acting on it. In space, free fall excludes drag.
9.8
The acceleration is 9.807 meters per second squared.
every second the velocity increases by 9.8m/s per second per second
An object in free fall is one that has only the force of gravity acting upon it.