An experiment from which you can calculate terminal velocity

AI Thread Summary
An experiment to measure terminal velocity involves dropping an object and recording its speed as it falls. The terminal velocity can be calculated using the equation sqrt(2mg/(density * area * drag coefficient), where drag force equals gravitational force at terminal velocity. To ensure accurate measurements, a sonic ranger can be used to track the object's speed during free fall. It is essential to determine when the object has reached terminal velocity, which occurs when the net force is zero and acceleration ceases. Analyzing speed data over time can help derive the drag coefficient and confirm terminal velocity.
Zara-!@#$*
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
"Describe an experiment that could be carried out in order to measure the terminal velocity of an object falling under gravity. Include any equations you would use or calculations you would make."

The only formula I can think of is F=ma, but I don't see how that is relevent.

My train of thought is currently that velocity is d/t. Therefore, I'd have thought that I would need to know the distance from which terminal velocity starts to when it hits the floor, and also the time spent in terminal velocity. But in order to find this I'd need to know how long it takes for drag to be in equilibrium with the weight, how long the object is falling, the distance from rest to the floor, the distance traveled before reaching terminal velocity and the weight.

I have been ill for a while and missed the lesson on terminal velocity. Yes, I did it at GCSE, but I never had to calculate terminal velocity so I'm at a complete loss.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Terminal Velocity equation is sqrt( 2mg/density*Area of object * drag coefficient) Basically the idea is that this is the fastest possible velocity that an object can obtain through freefall. And when it's at it's fastest point The downward force of gravity (9.8 m/s^2) == the drag on an object, so it maintains a constant speed. There's a lot of variables that can change the drag on an object through. And you can see how the equation is derived on wikipedia. That's pretty much what I know about air drag.
 
  • Like
Likes Zara-!@#$*
Heliosphan said:
Terminal Velocity equation is sqrt( 2mg/density*Area of object * drag coefficient) Basically the idea is that this is the fastest possible velocity that an object can obtain through freefall. And when it's at it's fastest point The downward force of gravity (9.8 m/s^2) == the drag on an object, so it maintains a constant speed. There's a lot of variables that can change the drag on an object through. And you can see how the equation is derived on wikipedia. That's pretty much what I know about air drag.

I've looked into that equation before, but to find the drag coefficient, I'll need the velocity and I don't know how to find that.
 
I would think that you would need to measure the speed of the falling object while it is in flight.
The speed normally increases without limit under the influence of gravity, but due to drag it will
only increase up to a point, at which stage it falls with a constant speed - its terminal velocity.
The drag on a falling object increases as the speed of the object increases, that is the drag force
is a function of the speed of the object and it increases as the speed of the falling object increases.
This means at some speeed the drag force will reach the same magnitude as the objects weight.
At this point the net force on the object is zero and it falls at a constant speed - the terminal velocity.
One detector that measures the objects speed is a sonic ranger. It bounces packets of sound off
the object and measures the duration for the sound packets to return to the detector. From these
periods and the known speed of sound in air (or via a calibration procedure) it can then calculate the
speed at which the object is moving.
 
  • Like
Likes Zara-!@#$*
One of the issues you need to address with your experiment is how to be sure that the velocity you measure is the terminal velocity. So describe how you would check that.
 
Zara-!@#$* said:
I've looked into that equation before, but to find the drag coefficient, I'll need the velocity and I don't know how to find that.
Well if we're on Earth, the gravitation acceleration is 9.8 m/s^2. However at terminal velocity the force of drag and the gravitational downward force equal out giving zero acceleration and a constant velocity. And here's a hint about the weight of the object, what's the weight of an object that's in free-fall.
 
If you have the form of the equation for the velocity as a function of time then you should be able to take several measurements along the trajectory (which aren't necessarily at terminal velocity) and fit such a curve to the data. From the fitted curve you should be able to extract the actual drag and predict the terminal velocity.
 
Back
Top