Science, asked by vigneshkgirish1409, 8 months ago

Feather coin experiment how it was done and what is the conclusion of the feather coin experiment

Answers

Answered by LEGEND778
3

Answer:

In a famous demonstration, Galileo supposedly dropped a heavy weight and a light weight from the top of the Leaning Tower of Pisa to show that both weights fall at the same acceleration. However, this rule is true only if there is no air resistance. This experiment lets you repeat Galileo's experiment in a vacuum.

The free fall of a coin and feather are compared, first in a tube full of air and then in a vacuum. With air resistance, the feathers fall more slowly. In a vacuum, the objects fall at the same rate independent of their respective masses. That means coin and feather both reach ground at same time in a vacuum.

Larger objects experience more air resistance than smaller objects. Also, the faster an object falls, the more air resistance it encounters. When the retarding force of the air just balances the downward pull of gravity, the object will no longer gain speed; it will have reached what is called its terminal velocity.

Since the feather is so much lighter than the coin, the air resistance on it very quickly builds up to equal the pull of gravity. After that, the feather gains no more speed, but just drifts slowly downward. The heavier coin, meanwhile, must fall much longer before it gathers enough speed so that air resistance will balance the gravitational force on it. The coin quickly pulls away from the feather

pls mark as brainliest answer

Explanation:

Answered by SAMYODDHA
2

Explanation:

coin and feather experiment drop a coin and a feather simultaneously in a tube. evacuate air from the tube and repeat the same dropping observe that in the first case the coin which is heavier than the feather reaches. the bottom of the tube. more rapidly while the feather flutters down slowly.

Similar questions