answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

the object will float
it shows increasing acceleration

User Avatar

Abbie Hyatt

Lvl 13
2y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Americo Powlowski

Lvl 13
1y ago

the object will float
it shows increasing acceleration

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

6y ago

Falling objects increase their speed as they fall, because their weight (the force of gravity) pulls them to Earth. ... Objects fall faster until they reach their terminal speed, which is reached when the upward (air resistance) and downward (weight)forcesare equal.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

6y ago

the object will float
it shows increasing acceleration

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

terminal velocity

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

7y ago

Terminal velocity (steady speed).

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What happens to a falling object when the force of gravity equals to the force of air resistance?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Natural Sciences

How will the upward force of air resistance compare to the downwward pull of gravity?

Assuming that you're referring to an object that is accelerating towards a massive body by means of gravitational attraction... When the force of frictional air resistance equals the opposing force of gravity, the net force on the object equals zero, and acceleration will cease. It is called terminal velocity, and the object will remain at this velocity until some new event happens.


What is the weight of a falling object that has a mass of 16 kg?

0 because while the mass remains at 16 Kg, as the object is falling its weight (caused by the pull of gravity on its mass) becomes 0 as its acceleration equals that of the acceleration due to gravity. (This is why things seem weightless when in orbit round the Earth - they are actually falling).


What is the magnitude of the tension in the cord?

Tension = mass(acceleration) + force of gravity Force of gravity equals mass times gravity (9.8m/s2)


What happens when the amount of drag becomes larger than the amount of thrust?

This state is known as terminal velocity. In it's current shape, an object as described cannot travel any faster. The force of gravity is constant where as the force of air resistance increases with velocity so it takes time for an object to reach its terminal velocity.


What are those different power ratings for the same resistance?

The amount of current that will pass through a resistance is dependant upon the voltage applied across the resistance. Voltage devided by resistance equals current. This is Ohm's Law.

Related questions

What happens to a falling object when the forces of air resistance equals the force of gravity?

the object will floatit shows increasing acceleration


What acceleration does the object reach when air resistance equals the force of gravity on a falling object?

the acceleration of gravity is 9.8 m/s


When air resistance equals pull of gravity?

When air resistance equals the pull of gravity, terminal velocity is reached. This is experienced by all falling objects if given enough time, and this is classically explained in Physics using skydivers.


What happens to free-fall velocity when air resistance equals weight?

If air resistance equals the force of gravity, the object will cease to accelerate, so its velocity will remain constant.


What is the net force acting on a falling oject when it reaches it terminal velocity?

Air resistance equals the pull of gravity, so essentially zero.


Air resistance causes the speed of a falling object to?

Nearly all falling object are affected by the resistance of air. However some objects have a mass greater than the air can affect. There is also the case where air resistance equals that of gravity and the object will not fall any faster.


How will the upward force of air resistance compare to the downwward pull of gravity?

Assuming that you're referring to an object that is accelerating towards a massive body by means of gravitational attraction... When the force of frictional air resistance equals the opposing force of gravity, the net force on the object equals zero, and acceleration will cease. It is called terminal velocity, and the object will remain at this velocity until some new event happens.


How do air resistance and gravity affect a falling object?

Objects when falling that cannot ignore air resistance are things like feathers, leaves, seeds, or small pieces of paper just to name a few. Objects when falling that can ignore air resistance are things such as objects that are heavy and compact like rocks or metal balls.


What does the speed of a falling object depend on?

From my experience it would depend upon the initial velocity along with the mass of the object and how gravity will cause it to accelerate. Distance also plays a part in that the longer the object has to fall the faster it will fall. That is until it reaches terminal velocity or when the force of gravity equals the resistance force like air resistance.


How is gravity related to terminal velocity?

Based on the 9th grade book of Physical Science... Gravity is a force that acts between two masses, and Terminal velocity is the constant velocity of a falling object when the force of air resistance equals the force of gravity. So, gravity causes objects to accelerate downward, whereas air resistance acts in the direction opposite to the motion and reduces acceleration... which ties together terminal velocity.


When equals the force of gravity on a falling object the object reaches terminal velocity.?

When THE FRICTION BETWEEN THE OBJECT AND THE ATMOSPHEREequals the force of gravity on a falling object the object reaches terminal velocity.


When the air resistince on a falling object equals the pull of gravity on the object what happens?

-- The net vertical force on it is zero. -- Its acceleration is zero. -- Its speed is constant. -- Its speed is what's often called its "terminal velocity".