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Well the average terminal velocity ofr an average sized jumper is 120mph. I fall at 120mph and fall 10,000 feet in 45/50 seconds so I guess about 213 feet per second.
1 foot.
The equation is 32 feet per second, squared or 9.8 meters/second squared.
1 second, since all objects fall at 16 feet per second.
The speed keeps increasing. At any instant, the speed is 32.2 feet per second faster than it was 1 second earlier. That number is called the "acceleration of gravity".
On earth free fall acceleration is 9.81 meters per second per second or 32.2 feet per second per second, not including air resistance. Around these parts, free fall acceleration is the acceleration due to earth gravity on a body that is not acted on by an outside force (like air resistance or a bungee tether). The actual value is cited in the earlier part answer.
Well the average terminal velocity ofr an average sized jumper is 120mph. I fall at 120mph and fall 10,000 feet in 45/50 seconds so I guess about 213 feet per second.
1 foot.
The speed of an object in free fall near the earth's surface is always 9.8 meters (32.2 feet) per second morethan it was one second earlier.
i think its like around amillion It isn't. We normally jump from 2500 feet ( a hop and pop ) to 14,500' for seventy-five seconds of free fall.
All objects fall at 32 feet per second per second, meaning that every second, they are falling 32 feet per second faster. Air resistance may have a minimal effect but the density of the object will not affect the speed.
9.8 meters per second squared. So the longer they are in the air, they will fall faster by each second.
38,430 cubic feet per second
The equation is 32 feet per second, squared or 9.8 meters/second squared.
1 second, since all objects fall at 16 feet per second.
32.2 feet.
The speed keeps increasing. At any instant, the speed is 32.2 feet per second faster than it was 1 second earlier. That number is called the "acceleration of gravity".