What is Free-fall: Definition and 75 Discussions

In Newtonian physics, free fall is any motion of a body where gravity is the only force acting upon it. In the context of general relativity, where gravitation is reduced to a space-time curvature, a body in free fall has no force acting on it.
An object in the technical sense of the term "free fall" may not necessarily be falling down in the usual sense of the term. An object moving upwards might not normally be considered to be falling, but if it is subject to only the force of gravity, it is said to be in free fall. The Moon is thus in free fall around the Earth, though its orbital speed keeps it in very far orbit from the Earth's surface.
In a roughly uniform gravitational field, in the absence of any other forces, gravitation acts on each part of the body roughly equally. When there is no normal force exerted between a body (e.g. an astronaut in orbit) and its surrounding objects, it will result in the sensation of weightlessness, a condition that also occurs when the gravitational field is weak (such as when far away from any source of gravity).
The term "free fall" is often used more loosely than in the strict sense defined above. Thus, falling through an atmosphere without a deployed parachute, or lifting device, is also often referred to as free fall. The aerodynamic drag forces in such situations prevent them from producing full weightlessness, and thus a skydiver's "free fall" after reaching terminal velocity produces the sensation of the body's weight being supported on a cushion of air.

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    In free-fall acceleration, how do I figure when g is positive or negative?

    In free-fall acceleration, how do I figure when "g" is positive or negative? Homework Statement My textbook is confusing me a bit. In general, when would "g" be positive and when would be negative? I thought it was when the particle was falling downward, it was positive and when it's going...
  2. G

    Free-Fall Acceleration Problem

    Homework Statement A bolt is dropped from a bridge under construction, falling 85 m to the valley below the bridge. (a) In how much time does it pass through the last 28% of its fall? What is its speed (b) when it begins that last 28% of its fall and (c) when it reaches the valley beneath the...
  3. P

    Gravitational Potential Energy during a Free-Fall Impact

    http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/flobi.html" Since the gravitational potential energy of the falling object at the point of impact is higher than the gravitational potential energy at the distance traveled after impact, where does the energy go? It is shown that the KE is removed...
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    Ball in Free-Fall: Find Final Speed

    Homework Statement A ball of mass m = 8 kg is dropped from rest at a height h = 13.9 m above the ground. Ignore air resistance. (a)If the ball is being released with a downward speed 4.9 m/s initially, what will be its final speed when it hits the table 0.7 m below the release point? (b)...
  5. C

    Help with gravitation and free-fall acceleration

    Homework Statement The planet Uranus has a mass about 14 times the Earth's mass, and its radius is equal to about 3.7 Earth radii. A)By setting up ratios with the corresponding Earth values, find the free-fall acceleration at the cloud tops of Uranus. B)Ignoring the rotation of the planet...
  6. W

    How Fast Must a Person Run to Catch a Ball Dropped from a Building?

    A ball is thrown upward from the top of a 24.2-m-tall building. The ball's initial speed is 12 m/s. At the same instant, a person is running on the ground at a distance of 29.2 m from the building. What must be the average speed of the person if he is to catch the ball at the bottom of the...
  7. Nim

    Free-fall formula, adding air resistance

    How do you add air resistance to these 2 equations? #1 sqrt(2 * d / g) = time until impact #2 sqrt(2 * d * g) = velocity on impact The equation for air resistance is: Fd = 0.5 * Air Density * Velocity ^2 * Frontal Area * Drag Coefficient How would you combine this equation with the above...
  8. E

    Free-fall Acceleration Problem

    Homework Statement A drowsy cat spots a flowerpot that sails first up and then down past an open window. The pot is in view for a total of 0.50 s, the top-to-bottom height of the window is 2.00 m. How high above the window top does the flowerpot go? Homework Equations Constant...
  9. B

    What is the value of gravity in free-fall and two-dimensional kinematics?

    Homework Statement I have just a question to clarify. When an object is in free-fall the gravity is always + 9.81 m/s^2? and also when it is talking about two dimension kinematics gravity is working on an object thrown in the air it is -9.81 m/s^2? Homework Equations The Attempt at...
  10. C

    Free-fall Acceleration with Centrifugal Force

    Homework Statement From Taylor's "Classical Mechanics", problem 9.15: On a certain planet, which is perfectly spherically symmetric, the free-fall acceleration has magnitude g = g_0 at the North Pole and g = \lambda g_0 at the equator (with 0 \leq \lambda \leq 1). Find g(\theta), the...
  11. F

    Constant acceleration and Free-Fall

    Homework Statement An object traveling along the x-axis at constant acceleration has a velocity of +10 ,m/s when it is at x = 6.0 m and of +15m/s when it is at x = 10m What is it acceleration? B)An object projected vertically upward with initial speed of v0 attains a maximum height of h...
  12. P

    How Do You Calculate Gravity and Final Velocity on Jupiter?

    Homework Statement A research party on Jupiter in the year 3005 drops a steel ball from 300 meters above ground. It takes exactly 5 seconds to reach the ground. a. Calculate the value of g (the acceleration due to gravity) on the surface of Jupiter. b. What is the velocity of the steel...
  13. C

    Solve Free-Fall Problem: Hot Air Balloon & Package t=2.26/2.49s

    Homework Statement hot air balloon traveling vertically upward at 2.2 m/s. at 25 m above ground, releases a package. Solve for t. Homework Equations d=v(initial)t + 0.5(a)t2 The Attempt at a Solution 25m = [0.0 m/s(t)] + ½(9.8m/s2)t2 25/4.9 = t2 t=2.26 seconds My question...
  14. F

    Free-Fall Motion (w/ a tennis ball)

    Homework Statement To test the quality of a tennis ball, you drop it onto the floor from a height of 4.00m. It rebounds to a height of 2.00m. If the ball is in contact with the floor for 12.0ms, (a) what is the magnitude of its average acceleration during that contact and (b) is the average...
  15. B

    Free-fall from space to earth surface

    1. The problem statement A object is dropped into a free-fall from a distance of 3 earthradiuses from the center of the earth. Starting at a velocity of 0. How long time does it take for the object to travel the halv distance to Earth (that would be the length of one EarthRadius), and how long...
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    What is the ratio of the free-fall acceleration at these two locations?

    Homework Statement A "seconds" pendulum is one that moves through its equilibrium position once each second (period = 2.000 s). The length of a seconds pendulum in Tokyo is 0.9927 m and at Cambridge is 0.9942 m. What is the ratio of the free-fall acceleration at these two locations...
  17. N

    Solve Free-Fall Problem: A Ball Dropped from Rest

    I've spent about an hour and a half on this question, working with different formulas and manipulating equations but I still can't figure it out. The question: "A ball, dropped from rest, covers three-quarters of the distance to the ground in the last second of its fall. From what height was...
  18. F

    Stuck on Free-Fall Acceleration problem

    I keep trying to get this right but I keep falling short. Here's the problem: A hoodlum throws a stone vertically downward with an initial speed of 19.0 m/s from the roof of a building, 39.0 m above the ground. (a) How long does it take the stone to reach the ground? (b) What is the speed of...
  19. K

    Free-fall question with extras

    This problem incorporates the main idea of gravitational freefall, but also adds an extra to it, and I get different answers from the back of the book: A rock is dropped from a sea cliff, and the sound of it striking the ocean is heard 3.2s later. If the speed of sound is 340m/s, how high is...
  20. C

    One Dimension Free-Fall Problem

    5. Sue is watching Hugh 7.2 meters below her when she sees him throw a ball up to hit her. She pulls in her head, but Hugh purposely threw the ball hard enough to hit her on his way down 1 second after it passes her on the way up. Explain how hugh figured this out... I used a sort of system...
  21. I

    Simple Harmonic Motion and free-fall accelerations

    A "seconds" pendulum is one that goes through its equilibrium position once each second. (The period of the pendulum is 2.000 s.) The length of a seconds pendulum is 0.9927 m at Tokyo and 0.9942 m at Cambridge, England. What is the ratio of the free-fall accelerations at these two locations...
  22. E

    Lots of Trouble With Free-Fall

    Hi, it's my first post. Thanks for letting me join your forums as I learn physics. Here is the problem: A stone is thrown vertically upward at a speed of 35.30 m/s at time t=0. A second stone is thrown upward with the same speed 1.390 seconds later. At what time are the two stones at the...
  23. S

    How Is Maximum Height Calculated for a Rocket in Free-Fall Acceleration?

    A rocket on the ground, accelerates straight upward from rest with constant net acceleration "a" , until time "t" , when the fuel is depleted. Here "g" is a positive number equal to the magnitude of the acceleration "a" due to gravity. -What is the maximum height reached in terms of a, t...
  24. G

    How Is Free-Fall Acceleration Determined Using Time Intervals and Distance?

    A measurement of free-fall acceleration,g, was made by throwing a glass ball straight up in an evacuated tube and letting it return. Let ΔTl be time interval between two passages of ball across a certain lower level, ΔTu the time interval between the two passes across an upper level, and H the...
  25. J

    Free Fall Acceleration: Better Term?

    We have already discussed the definition of g to death, but I have another question regarding the use of "free fall." This is also a term that is misleading, since a body doesn't have to be falling to be truly in free-fall. Can anyone come up with a better term?
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