Air resistance and gravity.
The forces acting on a falling body are gravity and air resistance.
Gravity and air resistance.
Air pressure.
Is the greatest velocity a falling object reaches is called its momentum
The forces acting on a falling body are gravity and air resistance.
The force of gravity, which pulls it down; and friction forces, which pull it up.
Terminal Velocity is the speed that a falling object achieves when the drag forces that occur from air resistance are equal to the gravitational forces acting on the object.
Balanced forces acting on an object do not change the object's position.
If an object is falling, and the gravitational force is the same as the air resistance acting against the object it is called terminal speed, the object does not speed up, nor slow down A balanced group of forces has the same effect on an object as no force at all.
Gravity: The pull of two objects on each other.Inertia: Basically something that slows any kind of acceleration or deceleration on a moving object.Yup, those two are the main forces that act on a falling object.
1.a buoyant force acting on the body upwards due to air . 2.the weight of body acting downwards . this two forces acts.....
Yes, the object can have equal forces acting in opposite directions: 5N ->[]<- 5N The object will have forces acting upon it, but will not move.