1 second wow
As a raindrop falls, it may lose some thermal energy due to air resistance and evaporation, especially if the air temperature is lower than the temperature of the raindrop. However, the main energy change during the fall of a raindrop is potential energy being converted to kinetic energy.
No, a raindrop is not a solid. It is a liquid that forms when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses and falls back to the ground as droplets.
A falling snowflake or raindrop does not accelerate as it approaches the ground because their mass doesn't change. The form is not affected throughout the fall so it is already approaching the ground at terminal velocity. Hope this helps.
Air resistance, also known as drag force, acts on a raindrop as it falls to reduce its speed. This force increases as the raindrop's speed increases, eventually balancing out the force of gravity and causing the raindrop to fall at a constant speed.
A raindrop typically travels horizontally for a short distance, usually less than a few kilometers, before hitting the ground due to gravity and air resistance. The exact distance can vary based on factors like wind speed, size of the raindrop, and height from which it falls.
25mph
it falls
As a raindrop falls, it may lose some thermal energy due to air resistance and evaporation, especially if the air temperature is lower than the temperature of the raindrop. However, the main energy change during the fall of a raindrop is potential energy being converted to kinetic energy.
No, a raindrop is not a solid. It is a liquid that forms when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses and falls back to the ground as droplets.
because the force of the earth pulls on the drop
60 second it per hour
18 km per hour
A falling snowflake or raindrop does not accelerate as it approaches the ground because their mass doesn't change. The form is not affected throughout the fall so it is already approaching the ground at terminal velocity. Hope this helps.
The average speed at which a raindrop falls is around 7 to 18 miles per hour. However, this speed can vary depending on the size of the raindrop and the air resistance it encounters.
No it does not, as a raindrop falls to earth it will gradually slow due to the changing terminal velocity. As a raindrop falls, water will evaporate from it causing the mass to decrease faster than the size and surface area. this will leave the raindrop with a higher surface area to mass ratio. Since air resistance is related to surface area and mass, the smaller raindrop will have more air resistance for its mass and will fall slower.
Air resistance, also known as drag force, acts on a raindrop as it falls to reduce its speed. This force increases as the raindrop's speed increases, eventually balancing out the force of gravity and causing the raindrop to fall at a constant speed.
When a raindrop falls on Earth, it either infiltrates the soil and contributes to groundwater recharge, flows into bodies of water like rivers and lakes, or evaporates back into the atmosphere. This process is part of the water cycle, which helps maintain the Earth's climate and support life.