What is Terminal Velocity? How Do We Find It?

What is Terminal Velocity? How Do We Find It?

Assessment

Interactive Video

Physics, Science

11th Grade - University

Hard

Created by

Quizizz Content

FREE Resource

The video explores the concept of free fall, emphasizing the role of air resistance. It explains how drag affects acceleration and introduces terminal velocity. Through an experiment with coffee filters, the video illustrates these concepts and discusses measurement uncertainty. It concludes with a comparison of terminal velocities between a baseball and coffee filters, and introduces numerical modeling for future lessons.

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10 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is the only force acting on an object in true free fall?

Magnetic force

Friction

Gravity

Air resistance

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What additional force acts on an object moving through air, preventing true free fall?

Normal force

Drag

Buoyant force

Tension

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

How is the net force on an object in free fall calculated?

Drag force minus gravitational force

Gravitational force minus drag force

Sum of drag and gravitational forces

Difference between normal and gravitational forces

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What happens to the acceleration of an object as it reaches terminal velocity?

It increases

It decreases to zero

It remains constant

It becomes negative

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is the terminal velocity of the five stacked coffee filters?

42 m/s

9.81 m/s

3.3 m/s

0 m/s

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Why does the acceleration graph of the coffee filters appear scattered?

Due to measurement noise

Because of constant acceleration

Because the filters are not moving

Due to incorrect data collection

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Why was a baseball not used instead of coffee filters in the experiment?

Baseballs are too small

Baseballs have a higher terminal velocity

Baseballs are too light

Baseballs are not affected by drag

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