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Learn about the concepts of acceleration, terminal velocity, and projectile motion in the context of gravity and free fall. Explore how these factors affect the behavior of falling objects and projectiles.
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Next stop, Earth Heavy, man “I shot an arrow into the air…” fallout Spaced Out 1pt 1 pt 1 pt 1pt 1 pt 2 pt 2 pt 2pt 2pt 2 pt 3 pt 3 pt 3 pt 3 pt 3 pt 4 pt 4 pt 4pt 4 pt 4pt 5pt 5 pt 5 pt 5 pt 5 pt
It’s the rate at which objects are accelerated due to gravity on Earth.
9.8 m/s2 1 PT
Its what this graph is showing for a falling object. V (m/s) t (s)
The object’s rate of acceleration slows to zero, meaning the object has reached terminal velocity 2 PT
29.4 m/s 3 PT
86.4 m. 4 PT
5.4 s. 5 PT
Gravity (or weight). 1 PT
Terminal velocity 2 PT
Air resistance 3 PT
This decreases as an object falls through the air and approaches terminal velocity.
Terminal velocity occurs when these two forces are balanced.
gravity 1 PT
It’s the two dimensions of motion associated with a projectile with a curved path
Vertical 3 PT
It’s how far a projectile travels horizontally after 4 seconds of traveling 23 m/s.
The projectile travels 23 m horizontally each second, so it is 92 m. 4 PT
It’s how much speed a free falling object on earth gains each second it falls.
The object gains 9.8 m/s of vertical speed each second it falls. 5 PT
It’s the net force of any object that is falling at its maximum falling speed
Zero net force 1 PT
The two factors that the air resistance of a falling object depends on.
One way that a falling object’s terminal velocity can decrease.
parabola 4 PT
trajectory 5 PT
The result of dropping a feather and a hammer on the moon or in a vacuum at the same time from the same height.
Gravitational force 2 PT
It’s absence on the Moon allows all objects to fall the same
Air resistance 4 PT
It is why a larger, heavier object falls faster on the Earth than a smaller, lighter object with the same frontal area.