Acceleration of Rain drop Under the heading 'Points to remember',my textbook states: It is possible that an object can be increasing in speed when its acceleration is decreasing as in case of a raindrop. I could not get why acceleration of the raindrop is decreasing. Should not it be constant as acceleration due to gravity is constant? Or there is some misprinting in the book?`Please help.

Kale Sampson

Kale Sampson

Answered question

2022-11-08

Acceleration of Rain drop
Under the heading 'Points to remember',my textbook states:
It is possible that an object can be increasing in speed when its acceleration is decreasing as in case of a raindrop.
I could not get why acceleration of the raindrop is decreasing. Should not it be constant as acceleration due to gravity is constant? Or there is some misprinting in the book?`Please help.

Answer & Explanation

Nkgopotsev1g

Nkgopotsev1g

Beginner2022-11-09Added 15 answers

The total force acting on a raindrop equals g minus air resistance which increases with velocity. In other words, as the raindrop speeds up, air resistance increases which decreases the acceleration (until eventually the acceleration equals zero and terminal velocity has been reached).

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