When gravity and air resistance of a falling object are balanced, it is called terminal velocity. At this point, the object falls at a constant speed because the force of gravity pulling it down is equal to the force of air resistance pushing back against it.
The highest speed when falling is called terminal velocity. This occurs when the force of gravity pulling an object down is balanced by the force of air resistance pushing against it, resulting in a constant speed.
Terminal velocity.
When air resistance and gravity are equal, it is known as terminal velocity. At terminal velocity, an object falling through the air no longer accelerates but rather falls at a constant speed due to the balance between air resistance and gravity.
The speed limit of falling objects is called terminal velocity. This is the constant speed that a freely falling object eventually reaches when the resistance of the medium it is falling through (like air) equals the force of gravity acting on it.
Terminal velocity.
The highest speed when falling is called terminal velocity. This occurs when the force of gravity pulling an object down is balanced by the force of air resistance pushing against it, resulting in a constant speed.
Terminal velocity see link
Terminal velocity.
When a falling object stops accelerating but is falling at a constant velocity, it is called terminal velocity.
When air resistance and gravity are equal, it is known as terminal velocity. At terminal velocity, an object falling through the air no longer accelerates but rather falls at a constant speed due to the balance between air resistance and gravity.
The speed limit of falling objects is called terminal velocity. This is the constant speed that a freely falling object eventually reaches when the resistance of the medium it is falling through (like air) equals the force of gravity acting on it.
Terminal velocity.
Its called terminal velocity
The greatest velocity a falling object reaches is called terminal velocity. It occurs when the force of gravity pulling the object downward is balanced by the force of air resistance pushing upward. At terminal velocity, the object falls at a constant speed with no further acceleration.
The maximum velocity reached by a falling object when the resistance of the medium is equal to the force due to gravity is called terminal velocity. At terminal velocity, the object no longer accelerates and reaches a constant speed as the drag force balances out the force of gravity acting on the object.
The greatest velocity, achieved when the acceleration due to gravity is balanced by the aerodynamic deceleration, is called the terminal velocity.
terminal velocity