If by increase drag, you mean slow the descent, then generally use a larger canopy. If that's not what you mean, then I have no idea.
In a tenths situation is when sky divers use decimals.
The Sky Divers - 1969 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-G
It affects sky divers because the closer you are to the ground the faster you go.
Sky divers do not go up, but they do undergo deceleration due to the increased drag incurred by the parachute being suddenly opened. Since skydivers, when being filmed by a cameraman, release their parachute first, there is a relative acceleration between the cameraman and the skydiver, creating the illusion that the skydiver is travelling up.
there sky divers
Sky divers use parachutes to jump from planes. SCUBA divers have difficulty searching Loch Ness because there are many inlets and lagoons, and many have so much sediment that the water is very cloudy.
Fluid Friction
Sky diving, because sky divers are able to control their descent.
no
when they have to figure out how to take a crap ha ha ha
The force down remains constant.force down (newtons) = (mass (kg) * acceleration due to gravity ((m/s)/s) ).The force up varies with velocity and drag coefficient ( which increases significantly when the chute opens).force up (newtons) = velocity2 * drag coefficient
Wexi Korhonen has written: 'Sky divers--tappajat taivaalta'