Does the acceleration due to gravity ever change?

AI Thread Summary
The acceleration due to gravity remains constant at approximately 9.81 m/s², regardless of a person's falling state. While a person falls, their acceleration does not increase or decrease due to gravity itself; it remains the same. However, in real-world scenarios, factors like wind resistance and drag come into play, opposing gravitational force. As a person accelerates, they eventually reach a point where the force of drag equals the force of gravity, resulting in no further acceleration, known as terminal velocity. This terminal velocity for a typical human is around 120 mph when falling belly-down.
jacy
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hello,
If a person is falling through the air will his/her acceleration
increase, decrease or will remain the same.

I think since the person is falling through the air with a negative velocity and his/her acceleration due to gravity is also negative, therefore his/her acceleration will increase. Please correct me if am wrong, thanks.
 
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I think since the person is falling through the air with a negative velocity and his/her acceleration due to gravity is also negative

you answered your own question, does the acceleration due to gravity ever change? Nope. Does any other force act to accelerate this person?(remember, to accelerate, you need a force!)well, in a vaccuum, no, you accelerate at the same rate foorrrrrever

but in real life(well, on our planet) you deal with wind resistance and drag and all that, which DOES exert a force that opposes the gravitational force, AND since the wind resistance force depends on your velocity, eventually you'll go fast enough that it's exerting a force just as strong as the gravitational force and you stop accelerating completely(for a normal full-sized human, about 120mph, belly-down)that's called terminal velocity
 
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