Physics, asked by 292, 9 months ago

What is Acceleration due to gravity

Answers

Answered by tapatidolai
2

Answer:

In physics, gravitational acceleration is the free fall acceleration of an object in vacuum — without any drag. This is the steady gain in speed caused exclusively by the force of gravitational attraction.

Answered by riyaenterprises012
2

Explanation:

gravitational acceleration is the free fall acceleration of an object in vacuum — without any drag. This is the steady gain in speed caused exclusively by the force of gravitational attraction. At given GPS coordinates on the Earth's surface and a given altitude, all bodies accelerate in vacuum at the same rate.[1] This equality is true regardless of the masses or compositions of the bodies.

At different points on Earth surface, the gravitational speed gain ranges from 9.764 m/s2 to 9.834 m/s2[2] depending on altitude and latitude, with a conventional standard value of exactly 9.80665 m/s2 (approximately 32.17405 ft/s2). This does not take into account other effects, such as buoyancy or drag.

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