Because there is only gravitatinal acceleration
Yes, exactly. Free fall results in constant acceleration.
Constant Acceleration
the object in free fall's acceleration depends on its mass
Free fall. Airbus has built aircrafts that may dive with an acceleration of 9.81 m/s2 to simulate zero gravity. satellites are technically in a constant free fall. A world where no friction would occur would lead to constant acceleration as long as the force acting on the object stays the same.
an object in free fall and an object's velocity is decreasing by the same amount every minute
Yes, exactly. Free fall results in constant acceleration.
Constant acceleration
When a mass is acted on by a constant force, such as in free-fall or in orbit.
Constant Acceleration
the object in free fall's acceleration depends on its mass
A sky diver in free fall
Free fall. Airbus has built aircrafts that may dive with an acceleration of 9.81 m/s2 to simulate zero gravity. satellites are technically in a constant free fall. A world where no friction would occur would lead to constant acceleration as long as the force acting on the object stays the same.
I do believe it will constantly get faster up into the point of disenigrating
The rate of free-fall acceleration is a constant based upon the local gravity - on planet Earth the acceleration is 9.8m/s2. Mass is a function of the object being measured or observed, which can vary considerably. The two do not directly affect each other, but both taken together determine the force of the object in free-fall - by knowing the free-fall acceleration and the mass of the object, you can calculate how hard it will impact the Earth.
an object in free fall and an object's velocity is decreasing by the same amount every minute
The acceleration in free fall IS the acceleration due to gravity, since "free fall" is the assumption that no forces other than gravity act on the object.
Acceleration. A free-falling object falls at constant force, and thereby at constant acceleration.