It makes it so you won't take as much damage when you take fall damage.
Without any feather falling, the default amount is 24 blocks and you will die. However, with feather falling boots you will be able to fall much further than that.
A falling elephant encounters a greater force of air resistance than a falling feather does. The force of air resistance can't be greater than the weight of the falling object. When the force of air resistance is equal to the weight of the falling object, the object stops accelerating, its falling speed becomes constant, and the force of air resistance doesn't get any bigger. So the force of air resistance against a falling feather can't be greater than the weight of the feather. But the force of air resistance against a falling elephant can be, and undoubtedly is, greater than the weight of a feather.
you can make arrows flint stick feather
Yes, a feather is considered a free falling object in a vacuum or an environment with minimal air resistance. However, in normal atmospheric conditions, air resistance can significantly affect the feather's rate of descent.
book then feather then ink sack
A feather.
You can't write on paper on Minecraft. However, you can write in books by adding an ink sac and a feather to them.
Usually its made of flint, a stick, feather MINECRAFT STYLE
* = string & = stick ^ = feather # = flint bow * & * & * & arrow # & ^ For more crafting. go to minecraft crafting.net
The cast of The Falling Feather - 2013 includes: Xiaoxiao Liu as Nan Suo Jingjing Qu as Xu Xuanzi Xiaodong Zheng as Mo Ke
As a feather falls, the force of gravity acts upon it pulling it downwards towards the ground. Additionally, air resistance creates an upward force that slows the feather's descent. The net force between gravity and air resistance determines the feather's acceleration and speed as it falls.
No, a feather falling in a vacuum is not considered projectile motion. Projectile motion involves an object being launched horizontally with a certain velocity while experiencing the force of gravity, causing it to follow a curved path. In a vacuum, there is no air resistance or drag force acting on the falling feather, so it falls straight down due to gravity.