Free Fall and the Acceleration of Gravity
A free falling object is an object that is falling under the
sole influence of gravity. Any object that is being acted upon only by the
force of gravity is said to be in a state of free fall. There are two important
motion characteristics that are true of free-falling objects:
· Free-falling
objects do not encounter air resistance.
· All
free-falling objects (on Earth) accelerate downwards at a rate of 9.8 m/s/s
(often approximated as 10 m/s/s for back-of-the-envelope calculations)
Because free-falling objects are accelerating downwards at a rate of 9.8
m/s/s, a ticker tape trace or dot diagram of its motion would depict an
acceleration. The dot diagram at the right depicts the acceleration of a
free-falling object. The position of the object at regular time intervals -
say, every 0.1 second - is shown. The fact that the distance that the object
travels every interval of time is increasing is a sure sign that the ball is
speeding up as it falls downward. Recall from an earlier
lesson, that if an object travels downward and speeds up, then its acceleration
is downward.
Free-fall acceleration is often witnessed in a physics
classroom by means of an ever-popular strobe light demonstration. The room is
darkened and a jug full of water is connected by a tube to a medicine dropper.
The dropper drips water and the strobe illuminates the falling droplets at a
regular rate - say once every 0.2 seconds. Instead of seeing a stream of water
free-falling from the medicine dropper, several consecutive drops with
increasing separation distance are seen. The pattern of drops resembles the dot
diagram shown in the graphic at the right.