Increase the wind resistance from underneath the paper
The main forces acting on a falling piece of paper are gravity, which pulls the paper downward towards the ground, and air resistance, which pushes against the paper as it falls. Gravity causes the paper to accelerate towards the ground, while air resistance slows down the speed of the fall.
To make a falling piece of paper stay in the air the longest, you can create a makeshift parachute by attaching lightweight materials such as string or light fabric to the paper. This will increase air resistance, slowing down the fall of the paper. You can also crumple the paper or fold it in a specific way to create more air pockets that will help slow down its descent.
You can crumple the paper up to increase its air resistance, which will slow down its rate of fall. This will cause the paper to fall more slowly, closer to the rate at which the book is falling.
By crumpling the paper into a ball or folding it into an origami shape, you create more air resistance which slows down the paper's fall, making it stay in the air longer than a flat piece of paper. The irregular shapes increase the drag force acting on the paper, resulting in a slower descent.
Friction between the air and the paper slows down the paper's fall by creating a drag force. As the paper falls, the frictional force increases until it balances out the gravitational force pulling the paper down, causing the paper to reach a constant velocity called the terminal velocity.
Make its surface area larger.
The main forces acting on a falling piece of paper are gravity, which pulls the paper downward towards the ground, and air resistance, which pushes against the paper as it falls. Gravity causes the paper to accelerate towards the ground, while air resistance slows down the speed of the fall.
To make a falling piece of paper stay in the air the longest, you can create a makeshift parachute by attaching lightweight materials such as string or light fabric to the paper. This will increase air resistance, slowing down the fall of the paper. You can also crumple the paper or fold it in a specific way to create more air pockets that will help slow down its descent.
You can crumple the paper up to increase its air resistance, which will slow down its rate of fall. This will cause the paper to fall more slowly, closer to the rate at which the book is falling.
By crumpling the paper into a ball or folding it into an origami shape, you create more air resistance which slows down the paper's fall, making it stay in the air longer than a flat piece of paper. The irregular shapes increase the drag force acting on the paper, resulting in a slower descent.
get a piece of paper and right it down
*Because once the leaf is falling, the wind blows it up, The paper actually comes down fast because it's way bigger than the leaf. *
I put down the answer on to my piece of paper.
Friction between the air and the paper slows down the paper's fall by creating a drag force. As the paper falls, the frictional force increases until it balances out the gravitational force pulling the paper down, causing the paper to reach a constant velocity called the terminal velocity.
use a piece of paper and write down the cause and then right by it write the effect
Vets use data bases so they don't have to write it down on a piece of paper. If they write it down on a piece of paper they migth lose the paper so that is why they use a data base.
you cut the paper up, down,up,down until the end then open the paper up then leave the end 2 rows then cut the inside ONLY. then put it through your body.there you have yourself a piece of paper through your body!:)