Physics, asked by bhavim, 10 months ago

Why is the accelaration of a free falling body postive??

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

<font size="+4"><font color="#ff0000"><p style="font:italic small-caps bold 18px/24px Garamond, Georgia, Times, Serif;width:200px;">ANSWER..!</p></font></font><font size="+1"><p style="font:italic small-caps bold 18px/24px Garamond, Georgia, Times, Serif;width:200px;">The acceleration would be positive. What we know about the Free falls is that an object is falling freely with no forces acting upon it except gravity, the defined constant of gravity is, g = -9.8 m/s^2. The distance the object falls, or height, h, is 1/2 gravity x the square of the time falling.</p></font>

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Answered by athul00741
1

Answer:

having different masses is the same. ... The force of gravity is greater on the more massive object, but its inertia is correspondingly greater. This results in the same ratio of force to mass for the two falling objects. Hence their accelerations are the same.

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