On Earth, but without any air. . . 334 feet.
Yes, the Ferrari Enzo does reach the speed of 100MPH in 16.2 seconds
The greatest velocity a falling object can reach is called terminal velocity. Terminal velocity occurs when the force of air resistance on the object matches the force of gravity pulling it down, resulting in a constant speed.
In a vacuum, there is no air resistance to oppose the motion of the falling object, so there is no force acting to limit its acceleration and reach terminal velocity. As a result, the object will continue to accelerate indefinitely as it falls through the vacuum.
the acceleration of gravity is 9.8 m/s
Yes, terminal velocity is the highest velocity that a falling object will reach when the force of air resistance equals the force of gravity acting on the object, causing it to no longer accelerate. At terminal velocity, the object falls at a constant speed without further acceleration.
The time it will take for an object traveling at 25 m/s to reach a distance of 125 meters can be calculated using the formula ( time = distance / speed ). Therefore, the object will take 5 seconds to reach 125 meters.
Yes. - And please don't combine "does" and "is" in the same question that way.
Falling Out of Reach was created in 2007.
There is no drag in a vacuum to act against the acceleration.
The mass of an object will not affect the time it takes for it to reach the ground from a fixed height. Backspace
In that case, it is said to have achieved terminal velocity.
at terminal velocity