polystyrene along with other porous (objects which have a lot of air in them) such as Styrofoam water, wood and other materials are insulators, not conductors.
Yes falling objects do have air resistance. They have even more if they have a larger surface area.
Air resistance.
In the absence of air resistance (friction) objects will fall at the same speed. Hope this still helps :)
air molecules in the way of falling objects
polystyrene along with other porous (objects which have a lot of air in them) such as Styrofoam water, wood and other materials are insulators, not conductors.
THEY HAVE PREVENTED BY, PLANTING TREES ALONG RIVER BANKS, CONSTRUCTING TALL CHIMNEYS, NOT BURNING PLASTIC OBJECTS
Objects are more buoyant in water than in air.
Yes falling objects do have air resistance. They have even more if they have a larger surface area.
Air resistance.
In the absence of air resistance (friction) objects will fall at the same speed. Hope this still helps :)
Objects less dense than air can float on air of that density. Air passing over objects (wings, kites, etc.) can provide lift and support the object. Air moving upwards at a speed equivalent to the terminal velocity of the object in the air stream will support the object. Solid air (frozen at -299oC if you don't care about the Helium or -270oC if you do) will support objects like any other solid.
bulllshyt
air molecules in the way of falling objects
well air resistance can make objects with a-lot of surface fall more slowly
well air resistance can make objects with a-lot of surface fall more slowly
floated