Don't objects in free fall always experience one g?

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SUMMARY

In the context of free fall, objects experience zero g, which is defined as weightlessness. During a skydive, a skydiver initially experiences less than 1 g in the aircraft, zero g during free fall, and approximately 4-5 g upon parachute deployment due to the rapid deceleration. Joseph Kittinger's record-breaking skydive reached a g-force of 22 m/s², but this was attributed to the forces acting upon him during parachute opening, not during free fall. The concept of g-force is relative to the acceleration experienced compared to free fall acceleration, which is approximately 9.81 m/s² at sea level.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of g-force and its calculation
  • Basic knowledge of physics principles related to free fall
  • Familiarity with the concept of acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s²)
  • Awareness of the effects of air resistance on falling objects
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the physics of free fall and terminal velocity
  • Study the effects of air resistance on skydiving dynamics
  • Learn about the calculations involved in determining g-forces during parachute deployment
  • Explore historical records of free fall jumps, including Joseph Kittinger's and Eugene Andreev's achievements
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Physics students, skydiving enthusiasts, and anyone interested in the dynamics of free fall and g-forces experienced during skydiving.

mr.physics
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I recently read an article about Joseph Kittinger which stated that in a skydive, he was subjected to a G force of 22 m/s^2. Disregarding fluid resistance, don't objects in free fall always experience one g?
 
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You can get a higher amount of g's when you open your chute. And 22 m/s² is barely over 2 g's.
 
Could you please explain why?
 
Because the chute is pulling you up.
 
mr.physics said:
I recently read an article about Joseph Kittinger which stated that in a skydive, he was subjected to a G force of 22 m/s^2. Disregarding fluid resistance, don't objects in free fall always experience one g?

No, objects in freefall experience practically zero g. That's kind-of the definition of freefall.

Can you link to or reference the article? Or cut and paste the line containing that statement, along with enough text to put it in context?
 
It must be referring to the acceleration experienced from the parachute at opening, as velocity decreases about 50 m/s.
 
Zero G in free fall. One G upwards at rest on Earths surface at sea level. For the skydiver, <1G in the aircraft, 0G in free fall, ~4-5G at parachute opening, >1G on landing, 1G on the ground.
 
Zero G in free fall.
Why?
 
  • #10
G-force is your acceleration relative to free fall. 0G is free fall is weightlessness.
 
  • #11
Neglecting drag of course, in the case of the skydiver.
 
  • #12
So an object experiencing a G force of 1 G is acclerating at 19.6 m/s^2?
 
  • #13
Isn't 1G 9.8 ms-2?
 
  • #14
Free Fall is just acceleration by gravity. However, the parachutist is also experiencing an acceleration by the opening of the parachute as mentioned (To slow down the speed of descent). If you add up the 2 accelerations (by vector addition) the acceleration is greater than the acceleration due to gravity.

And I think blkqi meant -1G experienced on when we are on the ground, so we have a net acceleration of 0.
 
  • #15
simpleton said:
And I think blkqi meant -1G experienced on when we are on the ground, so we have a net acceleration of 0.
No. What blkqi means is that if you measure acceleration using an accelerometer then you find that free-falling objects have 0 acceleration and an object at rest on the ground has an acceleration of g upwards. This is the acceleration that an object "feels".
 
  • #16
1G on the ground. You can think of g-force as the vector difference between the acceleration relative to the field and the acceleration experienced during free-fall, relative to the magnitude of free fall acceleration.

Thus in free-fall:
\frac{-9.8-(-9.8)}{|-9.8|}=0G

And on the ground:
\frac{0-(-9.8)}{|-9.8|}=1G
 
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  • #17
According to the usage of this acticle, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_fall#Record_free_fall", quoted above, "free fall" is the following:

"Near sea level, an object in free fall in a vacuum will accelerate at approximately 9.81 m/s2, regardless of its mass."

and

"Record free fall

Joseph Kittinger starting his record-breaking skydive. According to the Guinness book of records, Eugene Andreev (USSR) holds the official FAI record for the longest free-fall parachute jump after falling for 80,380 ft (24,500 m) from an altitude of 83,523 ft (25,460 m) near the city of Saratov, Russia on November 1, 1962. Though later jumpers would ascend higher, Andreev's record was set without the use of a drogue chute during the jump."

They imply that Free Fall in air occurs throughout the fall, and includes terminal velocity, where air drag exerts a balancing upward acceleration of nearly 1g. I say nearly one g because the diver slightly decelerates as the air thickens.
 
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  • #18
mr.physics said:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_fall#Record_free_fall
paragraph 3


At sea level on Earth do objects not fall at approximately one g?

Paragraph 3 is talking about acceleration due to an object in rotation. The article,

"(he went into a flat spin at a rotational velocity of 120 rpm; the g-force at his extremities was calculated to be over 22 times that of gravity, setting another record)."

--nothing to do with the vertical acceleration.
 

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