Question about gravity and falling

In summary, your high school physics teacher was a mean person who didn't teach you anything. However, you could still study engineering and it would help you understand basic physics.
  • #1
MMercado89
6
0
I haveve taken into to physics in high school and my teacher was a really great teacher but he was an @ss of a person. In my entire life i have never met someone so mean / ignorant to someone else so i never really asked him anything or tried talking to him so I am trying here.

Well here it is. I have seen the little experiment they do to show that no matter how big an object is, if dropped with a smaller / lighter object they will hit the ground at the same time if dropped from the same height. So i think if I'm wrong correct me that they are both falling at 9.8 m/s2. So if gravity is constant how come if i fall from a swing for example and hit the concrete floor i need stitches and if i jump off a building i splatter against the floor? Wouldn't the speed be constant so what's the difference? Thanks a lot i thought of this earlier and just couldn't find anyone with an answer so i thought i would try online.
 
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  • #2
In freefall, the speed is not constant [in time] but the acceleration [the time-rate of change of velocity] 9.8m/s^2 is constant, independent of the mass of the object...

In the little experiment, the speed at each time will be the same for objects of different masses dropped from the same height... that's why they hit the ground at the same time.

In your swing and building example, the same mass is being dropped from different heights. Upon reaching the ground, each will have a different impact velocity. To change that impact velocity to zero [say, in a fixed time of contact], requires an acceleration (and therefore a net force). A large impact velocity requires a large force to come to rest.
 
  • #3
ah thanks for the response finally got that off my chest. I was confused and lost all day. Thanks again
 
  • #4
Realize that what's constant is the acceleration due to gravity, not the speed. 9.8 m/s^2 tells how the speed of an object changes as it falls. As you well know, the speed at which you land depends on how far you fall. Ignoring air resistance, the longer you fall, the faster you end up falling: After falling for 1 second you are moving at 9.8 m/s; after falling for 2 seconds, you are moving at 19.6 m/s. Each second of falling adds another 9.8 m/s to your speed.

If you drop two objects from the same height, then their final speeds will be the same.

(robphy beat me to it!)
 
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  • #5
Doc Al said:
Realize that what's constant is the acceleration due to gravity, not the speed. 9.8 m/s^2 tells how the speed of an object changes as it falls. As you well know, the speed at which you land depends on how far you fall. Ignoring air resistance, the longer you fall, the faster you end up falling: After falling for 1 second you are moving at 9.8 m/s; after falling for 2 seconds, you are moving at 19.6 m/s. Each second of falling adds another 9.8 m/s to your speed.

If you drop two objects from the same height, then their final speeds will be the same.

(robphy beat me to it!)

well doesn't matter if he did you both helped a lot it was just bugging me very much lol
 
  • #6
If you know the measure of distance (meters), velocity is simply the change of distance over time (meters/second), and acceleration is furthermore the change of velocity over time (meters/(second)2). Acceleration, a, is important because it represents the motion from a force, F, acting on a mass, m; that is, F=ma, Newton's second law. Gravity may contribute to a force, as may air viscosity, the resistance of a spring, the pull or push of a magnet, the attraction or repulsion of charges, or the elasticity of a rubber band.
 
  • #7
see i want to take physics so badly but my college is telling me they highly recommend i don't because most people who study those fields are usually doing pre med or something around those lines. I want to study physics because I think its extremely interesting. This sucks.
 
  • #8
You could do engineering...
 
  • #9
would that help teach me basic physics?
 
  • #10
MMercado89 said:
would that help teach me basic physics?

Engineering *is* applied physics, so, yes.

But you should have some basic physics under your belt before you take a first-year college physics class. I suggest that since you seem to enjoy the subject and have questions you'd like to ask in a classroom environment, then you should ask an administrator at your school (perhaps a Vice Principle) to transfer you to another physics teacher who you'd enjoy learning from more than your current teacher.

Never lose a chance to explore the subjects which fascinate you, and your mind will never be bored ;)
 
  • #11
Maxwell's Demon said:
Engineering *is* applied physics, so, yes.

But you should have some basic physics under your belt before you take a first-year college physics class. I suggest that since you seem to enjoy the subject and have questions you'd like to ask in a classroom environment, then you should ask an administrator at your school (perhaps a Vice Principle) to transfer you to another physics teacher who you'd enjoy learning from more than your current teacher.

Never lose a chance to explore the subjects which fascinate you, and your mind will never be bored ;)

Thanks i will try and do that. Well i do have some level of knowledge due to my high school teacher. As i said he had taught me a lot just he was a d***head and was ignorant and thought he was better then anyone else and he would fail your whole test if you forgot to put the ^2 in something like m/s^2. I know that's important but to fail someones whole test over 1 mistake is ridiculous. Anyways I'm going to see what i can do.
 

1. What is gravity?

Gravity is a natural force that causes objects with mass to be attracted to one another. It is one of the four fundamental forces of nature and is responsible for keeping planets in orbit around the sun and objects on Earth from floating away into space.

2. How does gravity affect falling objects?

Gravity is the force that pulls objects towards the center of the Earth. When an object is dropped, gravity pulls it towards the Earth, causing it to accelerate and fall towards the ground.

3. Why do objects fall at the same rate?

According to the theory of gravity developed by Sir Isaac Newton, all objects with mass are affected by gravity in the same way. This means that regardless of an object's mass, it will fall at the same rate due to the force of gravity.

4. Can gravity be turned off or reversed?

No, gravity cannot be turned off or reversed. It is a constant force that is always present and cannot be manipulated by humans.

5. How does air resistance affect falling objects?

Air resistance is a force that acts against the motion of an object through the air. When an object falls, it experiences air resistance which can slow down its descent. This is why objects with a larger surface area, such as a parachute, fall slower than objects with a smaller surface area, such as a rock.

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