Q&A for How to Calculate Terminal Velocity

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  • Question
    If the drop is falling freely with the terminal velocity, then what will happen?
    Community Answer
    It will continue to fall at that speed without accelerating until it hits something.
  • Question
    What is base jumping?
    Community Answer
    B.A.S.E is an acronym for Buildings, Antennas, Spans, and Earth. BASE jumping is an extreme sport in which you jump off these various forms and deploy a small parachute.
  • Question
    What speed is terminal velocity?
    Ben Halford
    Community Answer
    Depends on the weight, shape, and density of the air. Hence, you have a way to calculate it, as it is not a constant.
  • Question
    How do I find terminal velocity with only radius and mass?
    Community Answer
    You can't. You need more information to solve the equation.
  • Question
    Is the terminal velocity in space equal to the speed of light?
    Matt Pattok
    Community Answer
    Anything with mass requires infinite force to reach the speed of light, so even in a vacuum it is impossible to reach the speed of light. This is really complicated, as light is composed of photons, which are massless particles. Due to this law, terminal velocity in a vacuum would be 99.999...% of the speed of light. According to Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity, this also causes time travel into the future, because approaching the speed of light slows down time. If you could travel faster than light, terminal velocity would be completely nonexistent (you'd keep accelerating). Basically, terminal velocity in space is just an infinitely tiny bit slower than light.
  • Question
    What is the change in momentum of a 950 kg car that travels from 40 m/s to 31 m/s?
    Community Answer
    Momentum(kgm/s) is equal to mass(kg) times velocity(m/s). 950kg * 40m/s = 38000kgm/s 950kg * 31m/s = 29450kgm/s 29450kgm/s - 38000kgm/s = -8550kgm/s
  • Question
    What is the distance required for a free-falling 100 kg mass to reach T.V.?
    Community Answer
    By the definition of a free fall, there is no air resistance. Since terminal velocity is reached when the force of air resistance = the force of gravity, this question is a trick question.
  • Question
    How can I determine the terminal velocity of the floating object like a small boat?
    Community Answer
    Terminal velocity refers to the equilibrium velocity as an object falls through a medium. The boat has no velocity relative to the most relevant medium, the water. If the boat were sinking, then it could obtain a terminal velocity, in which case the discussion above applies.
  • Question
    How do I calculate the speed a skydiver is falling after reaching terminal velocity using time after reaching terminal velocity and distance fallen after reaching terminal velocity?
    Community Answer
    If a skydiver has reached TV, then he is no longer accelerating downward. If you know the time he has fallen since reaching TV and the distance fallen, then his T.V.=dist/time. This is due to the fact the acceleration component is zero (due to being at terminal velocity).
  • Question
    If an object is falling at terminal velocity and an external force with the same direction as the falling direction is applied to the object, would a new terminal velocity be achieved?
    Community Answer
    You would be adding mass and possibly altering the drag. You would need to recalculate accounting for a different "object." It is possible the secondary object was affected by a lower air density due to the wake of the first object. It is also possible that drag changes drastically as airflow between two objects is very complicated. See aerodynamics like F1 having to account for vortexes. There will surely be some energy transfer at impact, but it would still return to its TV given enough time still in the air.
  • Question
    How do I find the terminal velocity of a raindrop of radius 0.2cm?
    Community Answer
    v = the square root of ((2*m*g)/(ρ*A*C)) but m=ρ*v, so v=the square root of((2*ρ*v*g)/(ρ*A*C)), so v=the square root of((2*v*g)/(A*C)). Finally v=the square root of((8/3*r*g)/c), r-radius.
  • Question
    Assuming I only use the metric system in my calculations, what would my end units be? Meters per second?
    Cabbache
    Community Answer
    Terminal velocity is a velocity, and the SI unit of velocity is meters per second (m/s).
  • Question
    How do I calculate drag coefficient?
    Cabbache
    Community Answer
    The drag coefficient depends on the shape of the falling object. For simple standard shapes you can look it up in a table, but if it is more complex, then you can find it with an experiment and the drag equation F = ρ.v^2.C.A where F is the drag force, ρ is the density of the fluid (air), C is the drag coefficient, and A is the projected area.
  • Question
    How can I find terminal velocity with only the radius, density and temperature?
    Cabbache
    Community Answer
    If given only the radius of an object, that means it is probably a sphere, for which the drag coefficient is 0.47. Assuming the density is of the sphere, not of the air, you can find its mass because you can calculate its volume from the radius. You also can find the projected area, which I believe would be half the surface area. The temperature should help somewhat in finding the density of air, although there are other factors that affect air density.
  • Question
    How do I calculate terminal velocity using the force of gravity and initial velocity?
    Cabbache
    Community Answer
    Terminal velocity is not dependent on initial velocity, but it is dependent on the force of gravity. You can calculate the terminal velocity using the acceleration due to gravity as well as other variables as stated in the equation.
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