all things fall at the same rate!!!!!!!!!! sumtng like a fraction or sumthing......
from v^2=2*g*s, then v= sq root (2*g*s)
g=10m/s^2
s=29.6m
v= sq root (2*10*29.6)
v= 24.33 m/s
Atypical habitat niches and colony collapse disorder are reasons why honey bees nest in the ground. The bees in question tend to seek above-ground nests located in woody plants proximitous to food sources. They nevertheless will accept ground-nesting when their biology is disrupted by the fatal colony collapse disorder or when their environment only offers cliff-top and ground-resting structures.
There are several reasons, but a primary one is that frozen ground is easier to move logs over than muddy soil. In older times, logging in the winter also allowed you to stack the cut logs on river ice, so that when the ice broke up in the spring the logs would be 'driven' downstream to the mill. Also, with the cold most of the under brush would be dead and trailblazing would be easier.
Spiders inject poison to make it paraliyse or die then it sucks the insect's body
It's mainly because they tend to like to hide in the trees and because of their much greater size.AnswerWhile the first answer is amusing, it is quite wrong!When lightning strikes the ground, a potential gradient(points of equal potential) is set up around the area of the strike as the current disperses into the ground. Imagine a 'bulls eye' in which the centre is the point at which the lightning strikes, and the 'rings' each represent a different electrical potential relative to the 'bulls eye'. A cow has a relatively large distance between its fore and hind legs. If the front legs should be on one of the 'rings' and the hind legs on another, then the potential difference appearing between the front and hind legs could be high enough to electrocute the animal. The distance between a chicken's feet, on the other hand, is so short that they are highly unlikely to bridge parts of the ground which are at different potentials and, so, are unlikely to suffer from electrocution.
a cat that's on the ground
Potential Energy The object is not in movement.
lightining strikes from clouds not the ground
RUN!
WWII-Naval battles (Fleet actions); troop support; strategic strikes Vietnam War-Strategic strikes against North Vietnam & close air strikes for ground troops Today-Strikes against precision targets/strikes in support of ground troops
it electricutes stuff
...he exerts against the ground
a big giantic hole in the ground
gravity.
it is not really called nothing it is when the rain hits the ground and the ground is so hot the heat is trying to evaporate
a platform is a raised surface so an oppisite will be like a street, sidewalk,or concreet ground.
yes it can:)
it doesn't. there are also cloud to cloudlightning strikes.