Physics, asked by siddeepankar98, 10 months ago

`why do raindrops falling under gravity not acquire very high velocity? give a practical application of this concept`​

Answers

Answered by mahi49620gmailcom
0

Answer:

This happens due to terminal velocity. When a rain drop falls under gravity through a viscous medium (say air) a viscous drag acts on it in a direction opposite to that of motion. ... Hence the rain drop starts moving with uniform velocity. This velocity is called 'terminal velocity'.

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