Drag is a force that acts in the opposite direction of an object's motion through a fluid (liquid or gas) and is caused by the interaction between the fluid and the object's surface. Drag can impact the force of gravity acting on an object when the object is either falling or being propelled through the fluid. In both cases, drag can either increase or decrease the net force of gravity acting on the object.
Drag refers to air resistance. Drag and gravity balance each other at terminal velocity when falling.
Drag is a resistive force that opposes the motion of an object moving through a fluid (like air or water). It acts on the force of gravity by slowing down the object's motion as it falls. The greater the surface area or shape of the object, the more drag it experiences, affecting how quickly it falls due to gravity.
The four forces acting on an airplane in flight are lift, weight (or gravity), thrust, and drag. Lift is generated by the wings and opposes the force of gravity. Thrust is produced by the engines and overcomes the force of drag, which is caused by air resistance.
Lift is the force that pushes an object upwards, typically generated by wings in airplanes. Drag is the force that resists the forward motion of an object through a fluid like air or water. Gravity is the force that pulls objects towards each other, such as the force that keeps us grounded on Earth. Weight is the measure of the force of gravity acting on an object's mass.
Drag is a force that acts in the opposite direction of an object's motion through a fluid (liquid or gas) and is caused by the interaction between the fluid and the object's surface. Drag can impact the force of gravity acting on an object when the object is either falling or being propelled through the fluid. In both cases, drag can either increase or decrease the net force of gravity acting on the object.
Drag refers to air resistance. Drag and gravity balance each other at terminal velocity when falling.
where air flowing along a surface will create lots of friction drag
drag
- Gravity/weight - Air resistance/drag/friction - Centrapetal force
Drag is a resistive force that opposes the motion of an object moving through a fluid (like air or water). It acts on the force of gravity by slowing down the object's motion as it falls. The greater the surface area or shape of the object, the more drag it experiences, affecting how quickly it falls due to gravity.
Gravity Drag Friction Propelling force
The four forces acting on an airplane in flight are lift, weight (or gravity), thrust, and drag. Lift is generated by the wings and opposes the force of gravity. Thrust is produced by the engines and overcomes the force of drag, which is caused by air resistance.
lift, thrust, drag and weight(gravity)
Alright, it is mainly the force of gravity. This is because if there was no gravity, you do not heat energy to fire the rocket up.
Gravity. The object starts at zero velocity, and gravity always pulls the same. Drag, however, increases when velocity increases. Terminal velocity is when gravity has accelerated the object to the speed where drag is the same as gravity.
Actually thrust is aerodynamically involved, its the driving force that accelerates the aircrafts in forward direction and the opposite force is drag. The opposing force against gravity in a flight is lift.