Terminal Velocity: Solve Physics IA Problem

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Markus Lervik
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Hello,

I am finishing my IB internal assessment in physics. I have thrown four balls (with different masses, 400,450,475,500 grams) from a height, which is approximately 23 meters. My teacher told me to set up a graph which showed mass vs. vt^2.

He said that the inverse of M= ((1/2)(p)(C_d)(A) / (g)) x v^2 is the slope. I have problems making anything of this. Can someone please explain how to get up with the equation above?

Thank you very much!
 
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The purpose of the investigation was to see how terminal velocity acts on objects with different weight.
 
Markus Lervik said:
The purpose of the investigation was to see how terminal velocity acts on objects with different weight.

What is the formula for terminal velocity?
 
PeterDonis said:
What is the formula for terminal velocity?

v_terminal = (Sqrt(2mg)/(C*p_air*A))
 
Markus Lervik said:
He said that the inverse of M= ((1/2)(p)(C_d)(A) / (g)) x v^2 is the slope.
That is not the slope. The slope is either the ((1/2)(p)(C_d)(A) / (g)) part or its inverse. Which of those depends on how you assign mass and v2 to the x and y axes.