Air resistance depends on the velocity of the moving object.
Air resistance depends on an object's size, shape, density, and surface area.
Gravity and air resistence.
A feather.
yes it does
yes, all the objects fall at same speed if we neglect air resistence but they appear to be falling at different speeds due to air resistence.
Gravity, Air resistence, friction and the push from the floor/table
because the air provides less resistence compared to water. dolphins do it aswellBecause they can!
no. Actually air exist on the surface of planets. It sticks to them because of gravitational force. there are no air particles in space. space is just nothing.
In a vacuum sealed room, yes, they can. If not, then without properly balanced air resistence, no. The only reason objects fall at different speeds is because of air resistence/terminal velocity, things of that nature. When dealing with air, and etc... if you want them to fall at the same speed, they have to have the same air resistence (a combination of space taken up, and mass.) So yes, they could fall at the same speed, but the yarn would probably have to be coiled extremely tightly.
Air resistance, also known as drag, slows down an object's speed by exerting a force in the opposite direction of its motion. As an object moves faster through the air, the force of air resistance increases, causing the object to lose speed. This effect is more pronounced for objects with larger surface areas or moving at higher speeds.
terminal velocity
No because of the air resistence
less air resistence and on big jumps it helps level out the quad so air doesnt catch the front fenders