a dead centipede
-- If there were no air, and he was dropped from 200 feet, then he wouldhit the ground 3.536 seconds later. (rounded)-- If he were to fall through air, then the answer depends on the person'ssize, shape, weight, clothing, and position during the fall.(Recall that one sky-diver can catch another one by assuming the proper positionduring the fall.)
yes it does come from the ground lighting is an oxidized column of air, the ground being the negative pole, and the air being the positive pole. Like arching a big spark.
Ignoring air resistance, that would be about 145 feet.
The diaphragm is the organ that helps you breath 282 cubic feet of air that you need every day.
A tree
You'r mom on an airplane.
a dead centipede
It is much closer to the ground.
An upside down centipede.
yes that is correct he can do that
he means your feet is not on the ground, because your mind is up in the air
Ground speed is of more concern to a passenger. If you have an air speed of 100 miles per hour and you're flying into a 100-mile-per-hour head wind, you're standing still with respect to the ground.
I assume you hit it up from the ground level as well. From Conservation of Energy, it immediately follows that: * If there is no air resistance, when it hits the ground it will, once again, have a speed of 100 meters per second. * Since under usual circumstances there WILL BE air resistance, its speed will be less than 100 meters per second.
When the aircraft is on the ground it is about 3 metres. When it is in the air it can be up to 5 nautical miles and 3000 feet
== == Cold air is more dense than the room temperature air so it drops to ground level where your bare feet just happen to be.
air burst