9.8 meters per second squared. So the longer they are in the air, they will fall faster by each second.
Depends. Can you swim? Did you fall in a deep bit or a shallow bit? is the current fast or slow where you fell in? Did anybody see? Was this in Paris, or in the mountains, or in Lower Normandy? It's just like falling into any other river, really.
200mph when falling from the sky if it ever was
because when you are coming down really fast and you slam into the water you could snap something in your body that is really inportant.... also your body can't handle that much prasher.....
5ft10'
A little while
17 mph
The answer to that is 40-56 mph i quess
They do fall. But they're traveling fast enough so that the surface of the Earth falls away from them as fast as they are falling. Same thing that keeps the Earth from falling into the sun.
it depends on how cloudy and fast the snow is falling.
if there is no air then both will take same time.But due to presence of air person who is without parachute will take less time.
Galileo
They don't fall because they're travelling too fast to fall. An orbit is technically a fall. An object orbits when it falls at the same rate as its forward movement, so while it's falling toward the earth, the earth is falling away from it below.
This would depend on how fast you were falling. In my opinion, it wouldn't take long at all.
A person will free fall at close to 200 miles per hour if he or she balls up. With the arms and legs extended, a person will fall at about 120 miles per hour.
About 27-30MPH
You need the amount of time that it took to fall the 45m.
At the end of 3 seconds, a falling object is falling at 65.8 mph faster than when it was released, ignoring air resistance.