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A skydiver has reached terminal velocity—she now falls at a constant speed, so her acceleration is zero. Is there a net force on her? If so, what is the direction?

User JimHawkins
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1 Answer

7 votes

Answer:

No, the net force on the skydiver is zero

Step-by-step explanation:

According to Newton's Second Law, the net force on an object is equal to the product between the mass of the object and its acceleration:


F=ma

where

F is the net force

m is the mass of the object

a is the acceleration

In this problem, the acceleration of the skydiver is zero:

a = 0

This implies that also the net force on the skydiver is zero, according to the previous equation:

F = 0

So, the net force on the skydiver is zero. This occurs because the air resistance, which points upward, exactly balances the force of gravity on the skydiver, acting downwards.

User ZXX
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