air resistance is the most likely to occur
free fall
-- "free fall" -- absence of terminal velocity
Yes, exactly. Free fall results in constant acceleration.
friction and any other kind of force that is in the opposite direction
-- "free fall" -- absence of terminal velocity
free fall
They Free Fall without losing it's/their momentum.
Free fall
Yes but due to air friction we cant see it free falling.
when the acceleration of the freely falling object is equal to the acceleration due to gravity then there occurs free fall.
-- "free fall" -- absence of terminal velocity
Yes, exactly. Free fall results in constant acceleration.
friction and any other kind of force that is in the opposite direction
-- "free fall" -- absence of terminal velocity
During free fall.
In free fall in a vacuum, all objects fall at the same rate of acceleration. In air, however, friction comes into play, so that various objects can fall at different rates.
What you're referring to is actually "an object in free fall" not "free for all". An object is in free fall when the only force opposing gravity is potentially the force of wind friction as the object is pulled to the ground (see Terminal Velocity).