Almost,fiction is what keeps back motion,air resistance is like a flat suface pushing up on what ever is falling,think about it like a sky jumper and his/her face gets push back,kinda like that
air pressure is when air gets pressed down
Drag
yes dork diary is a novel the same as diary of the wimpy kid is a novel
fiction
fiction is Imaginary stories, non-fiction is real stories
No air resistance. No air resistance. Because falling bodies accellerate at the same rate regardless of mass
The force that changes is air resistance and the force that stay the same is gravity.
As an object accelerates, air resistance also increases due to the object moving through the air at a higher speed. This increased air resistance creates a force opposite to the direction of motion, ultimately slowing down the acceleration of the object.
it would be slower
Neglecting air resistance ... all of them.
As an object rises WITH air resistance, the acceleration is larger in size than g, because both gravity and air resistance will be causing a downward acceleration. As the object FALLS with air resistance, the acceleration will be smaller in size than g, because gravity and resistance will be opposing each other. Because of the smaller acceleration being applied over the same distance, the return speed will be slower than the launch speed.
Air resistance of an object can slow its fall. If every object had the same resistance, everything would fall at the same speed.
If two objects on the same planet are dropped from the same place at the same time and there is no air resistance, they fall with the same acceleration, and they hit the ground at the same time with the same speed. Their size, mass, weight, temperature, color, political affiliation, race, creed, or sexual orientation make no difference.
Air resistance is a force that opposes the motion of an object through the air. In the context of gravity, air resistance can affect the speed and trajectory of a falling object. In the absence of air resistance, all objects would fall at the same rate regardless of their mass, as described by the principle of gravitational acceleration.
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.
Yes - but only if you can ignore air resistance, that is, if the objects fall for a sufficiently short time, and have a sufficiently high mass, and sufficiently small surface area, so that air resistance becomes insignificant.Yes - but only if you can ignore air resistance, that is, if the objects fall for a sufficiently short time, and have a sufficiently high mass, and sufficiently small surface area, so that air resistance becomes insignificant.Yes - but only if you can ignore air resistance, that is, if the objects fall for a sufficiently short time, and have a sufficiently high mass, and sufficiently small surface area, so that air resistance becomes insignificant.Yes - but only if you can ignore air resistance, that is, if the objects fall for a sufficiently short time, and have a sufficiently high mass, and sufficiently small surface area, so that air resistance becomes insignificant.
Set aside air resistance (drag) and the answer is no. Objects fall at the same speed when accelerated by gravity when there is no air resistance.