Search Header Logo

Free Fall Practice

Authored by Beth VanOstrand

Science

9th - 12th Grade

NGSS covered

Used 2+ times

Free Fall Practice
AI

AI Actions

Add similar questions

Adjust reading levels

Convert to real-world scenario

Translate activity

More...

    Content View

    Student View

10 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

The acceleration of a freely falling body on Earth is

9.8 m/s.

9.8 m.

9.8 m/s2.

9.8 s.

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

If you know the time an object is in the air, can you find the Vf of the object?

Yes, you would have to halve the time since the Ttotal is for both rise and fall and you would have to calculate the height the object rose before finding the Vf
Yes, you would use the time the object was in the air to find the distance the object travels upward before 
No, you are not given enough information
No, it depends on the acceleration, which is different on the way up and on the way down.

Tags

NGSS.HS-PS2-1

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Which would fall with greater acceleration in a vacuum—a leaf or a stone?

the leaf
the stone
They would accelerate at the same rate.
It is difficult to determine without more information.

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

When there is no air resistance, objects of different masses dropped from rest

fall with equal accelerations and with equal displacements.
fall with different accelerations and with different displacements.
fall with equal accelerations and with different displacements.
fall with different accelerations and with equal displacements.

Tags

NGSS.HS-PS2-1

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

Media Image

A ball is thrown upwards and caught when it comes back down. In the absence of air resistance, the

when would the ball reach a velocity of 0 m/s?

at the top

at the bottom

in the middle

Tags

NGSS.MS-PS2-4

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

In a normal environment, why does a bowling ball and feather hit the ground at different times when dropped from the same height?

They don't; they hit the ground at the same time.
One is more dense than the other.
One is heavier than the other.
Air resistance 

7.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

If an object is dropped from a cliff of 100m, what are your 'givens' you can start with?

CHECK ALL THAT APPLY.

d = 100 m

vi = 0

t = 100 s

a = 9.8 m/s2

vf = 0

Access all questions and much more by creating a free account

Create resources

Host any resource

Get auto-graded reports

Google

Continue with Google

Email

Continue with Email

Classlink

Continue with Classlink

Clever

Continue with Clever

or continue with

Microsoft

Microsoft

Apple

Apple

Others

Others

Already have an account?