The terminal velocity of a cat is around 60 miles per hour, which is the speed at which they reach maximum falling velocity due to air resistance balancing out the force of gravity.
Yes, cats have a unique ability to survive falls from great heights due to their flexible bodies and instinctual ability to spread out and slow their descent. This is known as the "cat righting reflex."
No, a cat cannot survive terminal velocity, which is the maximum speed an object can reach while falling through the air. The impact would be fatal to the cat.
The maximum speed a cat can reach when falling from a great height, also known as its terminal velocity, is around 60 miles per hour.
No, cats do not naturally hallucinate. Hallucinations are typically a result of neurological or psychological disorders, which are not common in cats.
Terminal values are the ultimate goals or end states that a person wants to achieve, such as happiness or success. Instrumental values, on the other hand, are the means or behaviors that a person believes will help them achieve their terminal values, such as honesty or hard work.
In that case, the object is said to have achieved terminal speed.
terminal velocity
We will reach terminal velocity just before we hit the ground, then the result of our velocity will be terminal.
The marble has lower drag so its terminal velocity would be greater. Each has its own terminal velocity.
The speed at terminal velocity depends on the mass and shape of the object. For example, a sheet of paper will have a very low terminal velocity; the terminal velocity for a man will be much higher.
Terminal Velocity - video game - happened in 1995.
Terminal Velocity - film - was created on 1994-09-23.
No. Terminal velocity is a particular kind of velocity and friction is a particular kind of force. The terminal velocity of a falling object is the maximum velocity it can have because air resistance prevents it from going any faster. And air resistance is a type of friction. So terminal velocity is due to a type of friction.
newton's first law states: an object will remain at rest or at a constant velocity unless the forces on it become unbalanced. As the forces on the object are now balanced it falls at a constant velocity. For falling objects this is called the terminal velocity
increase- your speed will increase until terminal velocity is reached. From there it will stay constant.
The velocity at the starting point when an object tries to attain terminal velocity is zero. As the object falls, it accelerates due to gravity until air resistance builds up to match the force of gravity, resulting in a constant terminal velocity being reached.
Yes, but only in free-fall. If I'm driving at 60 mph, I have a constant velocity, but it's not my "terminal velocity" in the sense that there is no limit to my acceleration caused by air friction. But yes, an object in free-fall reaches its terminal velocity when its velocity stops increasing (acceleration=0).