The factors that affect the speed of an object in free fall with air resistance are the object's mass, the surface area of the object, the density of the air, and the gravitational force acting on the object.
No, the density of an object does not directly affect its speed. The speed of an object is determined by factors such as the force applied to it and the resistance it encounters, not its density.
The three factors that affect the amount of air resistance on an object are the object's speed (faster speed leads to higher air resistance), the object's size and shape (larger or less streamlined shapes experience higher air resistance), and the air density (higher air density increases air resistance).
The factors that affect the amount of air resistance acting on an object are the speed of the object, the surface area exposed to the air, and the shape of the object. A faster object experiences more air resistance than a slower one, a larger surface area increases air resistance, and a streamlined shape reduces air resistance.
The factors that affect air resistance include the speed of the object (higher speed leads to greater air resistance), the surface area of the object (larger surface area experiences more air resistance), the shape of the object (streamlined shapes experience less air resistance), and the air density (higher air density increases resistance).
Inertia.
No, the density of an object does not directly affect its speed. The speed of an object is determined by factors such as the force applied to it and the resistance it encounters, not its density.
shape, size, and speed
shape, size, and speed
The three factors that affect the amount of air resistance on an object are the object's speed (faster speed leads to higher air resistance), the object's size and shape (larger or less streamlined shapes experience higher air resistance), and the air density (higher air density increases air resistance).
The factors that affect the amount of air resistance acting on an object are the speed of the object, the surface area exposed to the air, and the shape of the object. A faster object experiences more air resistance than a slower one, a larger surface area increases air resistance, and a streamlined shape reduces air resistance.
The factors that affect air resistance include the speed of the object (higher speed leads to greater air resistance), the surface area of the object (larger surface area experiences more air resistance), the shape of the object (streamlined shapes experience less air resistance), and the air density (higher air density increases resistance).
Inertia.
The speed of an object is influenced by factors such as the force applied to it, the mass of the object, and the resistance it encounters from the surrounding environment.
The variables that affect air resistance include the speed of an object moving through the air, the surface area and shape of the object, the density of the air, and the viscosity of the air. Additionally, factors such as the altitude of the object and any obstacles in its path can also influence air resistance.
Speed, shape and frontal cross-section. Viscosity, texture, friction, gravity, velocity, size, and shape can all affect air resistance.
Factors that increase speed of a falling object:HEIGHT - The longer an object is in the air the more speed it gains due to gravityGRAVITY - The strength of the acelleration due to gravity (eg the moon is different to earth)STARTING VELOCITY - The speed the object starts at.Factors that decrease the speed of a falling object:AIR RESISTANCE - Air resistance is a major factor however it in itself is dependant on the air pressure around the object and the surface area of the object.
The internal composition or material of an object does not affect air resistance. Air resistance is mainly determined by an object's size, shape, and speed when moving through air.