Ignoring the effects of air resistance, freely falling objects accelerate at a constant rate. On Earth, the acceleration due to gravity is 9.8 meters per second squared or 32.2 feet per second squared. In the real world, however, objects don't speed up forever. Air resistance places a limit on how fast they can go.
The speed of a free falling object is never constant. It changes with respect to time as a free falling object always is acted upon by g,i.e, acceleration due to gravity. thus, if v is the final speed of the particle, u is the initial velocity of the particle and t time then v= u+gt, where g =9.8/10(approx.)
A falling object doesn't have constant velocity.
It has constant acceleration. That means that its velocity increases at a steady (constant) rate.
The rate is called the "acceleration of gravity".
Acceleration is constant.
Velocity increases at a constant rate.
Terminal velocity. This varies depending on the object and the resistance it causes against the atmosphere it is falling through and of course gravitational pull.
Its mass is constant - unless it undergoes thermonuclear change, for example inside the sun.
yes, and the speed depends on the weight of the object
A falling object will continue to accelerate when free falling, but each object has a maximum speed which it can reach (but go no faster than this speed) when free falling from great heights. True.
it all depends on the object
It depends on the object's mass.
1.the speed 2.air 3.force
yes, and the speed depends on the weight of the object
Everything falls at the same speed so there is no free falling object If everything falls at the same speed then everything is a free falling object... Air resistance or deflection controls the falling speed of any object, this crucial stipulation determines falling speed. I leanred this in flight school.. please someone intelligent communicate with me?
A falling object will continue to accelerate when free falling, but each object has a maximum speed which it can reach (but go no faster than this speed) when free falling from great heights. True.
it all depends on the object
It depends on the object's mass.
There is a uniform accleration of 9.8 m/s*s experienced by a free falling object, caused due to the earth's gravity.
terminal velocity
1.the speed 2.air 3.force
an object free falling would continue to gain speed until met by a balanced force i.e. the ground
The speed stays thesame but the distance stays the same.
A falling object.
the object's falling speed