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Terminal velocity

Terminal velocity is the maximum velocity (speed) attainable by an object as it falls through a fluid (air is the most common example). It occurs when the sum of the drag force (Fd) and the buoyancy is equal to the downward force of gravity (FG) acting on the object. Since the net force on the object is zero, the object has zero acceleration.[1] For objects falling through regular air, the buoyant force is usually dismissed and not taken into account as its effects are negligible[citation needed]

The downward force of gravity (Fg) equals the restraining force of drag (Fd) plus the buoyancy. The net force on the object is zero, and the result is that the velocity of the object remains constant.

In fluid dynamics an object is moving at its terminal velocity if its speed is constant due to the restraining force exerted by the fluid through which it is moving.[2]

As the speed of an object increases, so does the drag force acting on it, which also depends on the substance it is passing through (for example air or water). At some speed, the drag or force of resistance will equal the gravitational pull on the object. At this point the object stops accelerating and continues falling at a constant speed called the terminal velocity (also called settling velocity). An object moving downward faster than the terminal velocity (for example because it was thrown downwards, it fell from a thinner part of the atmosphere, or it changed shape) will slow down until it reaches the terminal velocity. Drag depends on the projected area, here represented by the object's cross-section or silhouette in a horizontal plane. An object with a large projected area relative to its mass, such as a parachute, has a lower terminal velocity than one with a small projected area relative to its mass, such as a dart. In general, for the same shape and material, the terminal velocity of an object increases with size. This is because the downward force (weight) is proportional to the cube of the linear dimension, but the air resistance is approximately proportional to the cross-section area which increases only as the square of the linear dimension. For very small objects such as dust and mist, the terminal velocity is easily overcome by convection currents which can prevent them from reaching the ground at all, and hence they can stay suspended in the air for indefinite periods. Air pollution and fog are examples.

Examples edit

 
Graph of velocity versus time of a skydiver reaching a terminal velocity.

Based on air resistance, for example, the terminal speed of a skydiver in a belly-to-earth (i.e., face down) free fall position is about 55 m/s (180 ft/s).[3] This speed is the asymptotic limiting value of the speed, and the forces acting on the body balance each other more and more closely as the terminal speed is approached. In this example, a speed of 50% of terminal speed is reached after only about 3 seconds, while it takes 8 seconds to reach 90%, 15 seconds to reach 99% and so on.

Higher speeds can be attained if the skydiver pulls in their limbs (see also freeflying). In this case, the terminal speed increases to about 90 m/s (300 ft/s),[3] which is almost the terminal speed of the peregrine falcon diving down on its prey.[4] The same terminal speed is reached for a typical .30-06 bullet dropping downwards—when it is returning to the ground having been fired upwards, or dropped from a tower—according to a 1920 U.S. Army Ordnance study.[5]

Competition speed skydivers fly in a head-down position and can reach speeds of 150 m/s (490 ft/s).[citation needed] The current record is held by Felix Baumgartner who jumped from an altitude of 38,887 m (127,582 ft) and reached 380 m/s (1,200 ft/s), though he achieved this speed at high altitude where the density of the air is much lower than at the Earth's surface, producing a correspondingly lower drag force.[6]

The biologist J. B. S. Haldane wrote,

To the mouse and any smaller animal [gravity] presents practically no dangers. You can drop a mouse down a thousand-yard mine shaft; and, on arriving at the bottom, it gets a slight shock and walks away. A rat is killed, a man is broken, a horse splashes. For the resistance presented to movement by the air is proportional to the surface of the moving object. Divide an animal's length, breadth, and height each by ten; its weight is reduced to a thousandth, but its surface only to a hundredth. So the resistance to falling in the case of the small animal is relatively ten times greater than the driving force.[7]

Physics edit

Using mathematical terms, terminal speed—without considering buoyancy effects—is given by

 
where
  •   represents terminal velocity,
  •   is the mass of the falling object,
  •   is the acceleration due to gravity,
  •   is the drag coefficient,
  •   is the density of the fluid through which the object is falling, and
  •   is the projected area of the object.[8]

In reality, an object approaches its terminal speed asymptotically.

Buoyancy effects, due to the upward force on the object by the surrounding fluid, can be taken into account using Archimedes' principle: the mass   has to be reduced by the displaced fluid mass  , with   the volume of the object. So instead of   use the reduced mass   in this and subsequent formulas.

The terminal speed of an object changes due to the properties of the fluid, the mass of the object and its projected cross-sectional surface area.

Air density increases with decreasing altitude, at about 1% per 80 metres (260 ft) (see barometric formula). For objects falling through the atmosphere, for every 160 metres (520 ft) of fall, the terminal speed decreases 1%. After reaching the local terminal velocity, while continuing the fall, speed decreases to change with the local terminal speed.

Using mathematical terms, defining down to be positive, the net force acting on an object falling near the surface of Earth is (according to the drag equation):

 

with v(t) the velocity of the object as a function of time t.

At equilibrium, the net force is zero (Fnet = 0)[9] and the velocity becomes the terminal velocity limt→∞ v(t) = Vt:

 

Solving for Vt yields:

 

 

 

 

 

(5)

The drag equation is—assuming ρ, g and Cd to be constants:

 

Although this is a Riccati equation that can be solved by reduction to a second-order linear differential equation, it is easier to separate variables.

A more practical form of this equation can be obtained by making the substitution α2 = ρACd/2mg.

Dividing both sides by m gives

 

The equation can be re-arranged into

 

Taking the integral of both sides yields

 

After integration, this becomes

 

or in a simpler form

 
with artanh the inverse hyperbolic tangent function.

Alternatively,

 
with tanh the hyperbolic tangent function. Assuming that g is positive (which it was defined to be), and substituting α back in, the speed v becomes
 

Using the formula for terminal velocity

 
the equation can be rewritten as
 

As time tends to infinity (t → ∞), the hyperbolic tangent tends to 1, resulting in the terminal speed

 
 
Creeping flow past a sphere: streamlines, drag force Fd and force by gravity Fg

For very slow motion of the fluid, the inertia forces of the fluid are negligible (assumption of massless fluid) in comparison to other forces. Such flows are called creeping or Stokes flows and the condition to be satisfied for the flows to be creeping flows is the Reynolds number,  . The equation of motion for creeping flow (simplified Navier–Stokes equation) is given by:

 

where:

  •   is the fluid velocity vector field,
  •   is the fluid pressure field,
  •   is the liquid/fluid viscosity.

The analytical solution for the creeping flow around a sphere was first given by Stokes in 1851.[10] From Stokes' solution, the drag force acting on the sphere of diameter   can be obtained as

 

 

 

 

 

(6)

where the Reynolds number,  . The expression for the drag force given by equation (6) is called Stokes' law.

When the value of   is substituted in the equation (5), we obtain the expression for terminal speed of a spherical object moving under creeping flow conditions:[11]

 
where   is the density of the object.

Applications edit

The creeping flow results can be applied in order to study the settling of sediments near the ocean bottom and the fall of moisture drops in the atmosphere. The principle is also applied in the falling sphere viscometer, an experimental device used to measure the viscosity of highly viscous fluids, for example oil, paraffin, tar etc.

Terminal velocity in the presence of buoyancy force edit

 
Settling velocity Ws of a sand grain (diameter d, density 2650 kg/m3) in water at 20 °C, computed with the formula of Soulsby (1997).

When the buoyancy effects are taken into account, an object falling through a fluid under its own weight can reach a terminal velocity (settling velocity) if the net force acting on the object becomes zero. When the terminal velocity is reached the weight of the object is exactly balanced by the upward buoyancy force and drag force. That is

 

 

 

 

 

(1)

where

  •   is the weight of the object,
  •   is the buoyancy force acting on the object, and
  •   is the drag force acting on the object.

If the falling object is spherical in shape, the expression for the three forces are given below:

 

 

 

 

 

(2)

 

 

 

 

 

(3)

 

 

 

 

 

(4)

where

  •   is the diameter of the spherical object,
  •   is the gravitational acceleration,
  •   is the density of the fluid,
  •   is the density of the object,
  •   is the projected area of the sphere,
  •   is the drag coefficient, and
  •   is the characteristic velocity (taken as terminal velocity,  ).

Substitution of equations (24) in equation (1) and solving for terminal velocity,   to yield the following expression

 

 

 

 

 

(5)

In equation (1), it is assumed that the object is denser than the fluid. If not, the sign of the drag force should be made negative since the object will be moving upwards, against gravity. Examples are bubbles formed at the bottom of a champagne glass and helium balloons. The terminal velocity in such cases will have a negative value, corresponding to the rate of rising up.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "6.4 Drag Force and Terminal Speed - University Physics Volume 1 | OpenStax". openstax.org. 19 September 2016. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  2. ^ Riazi, A.; Türker, U. (January 2019). "The drag coefficient and settling velocity of natural sediment particles". Computational Particle Mechanics. 6 (3): 427–437. Bibcode:2019CPM.....6..427R. doi:10.1007/s40571-019-00223-6. S2CID 127789299.
  3. ^ a b Huang, Jian (1998). Elert, Glenn (ed.). "Speed of a skydiver (terminal velocity)". The Physics Factbook. Retrieved 2022-01-25.
  4. ^ . U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. December 20, 2007. Archived from the original on March 8, 2010.
  5. ^ The Ballistician (March 2001). . W. Square Enterprises, 9826 Sagedale, Houston, Texas 77089. Archived from the original on 2008-03-31.
  6. ^ Garbino, Alejandro; Blue, Rebecca S.; Pattarini, James M.; Law, Jennifer; Clark, Jonathan B. (February 2014). "Physiological Monitoring and Analysis of a Manned Stratospheric Balloon Test Program". Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine. 85 (2): 177–178. doi:10.3357/ASEM.3744.2014. PMID 24597163.
  7. ^ Haldane, J. B. S. (March 1926). . Harper's Magazine. March 1926. Archived from the original on 2015-04-15. Alt URL
  8. ^ Cousens, Roger; Dytham, Calvin; Law, Richard (2008). Dispersal in Plants: A Population Perspective. Oxford University Press. pp. 26–27. ISBN 978-0-19-929911-9.
  9. ^ Massel, Stanisław R. (1999). Fluid Mechanics for Marine Ecologists. Springer Science+Business Media. p. 22. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-60209-2. ISBN 978-3-642-60209-2.
  10. ^ Stokes, G. G. (1851). "On the effect of internal friction of fluids on the motion of pendulums". Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 9, part ii: 8–106. Bibcode:1851TCaPS...9....8S. The formula for terminal velocity (V)] appears on p. [52], equation (127).
  11. ^ Lamb, H. (1994). Hydrodynamics (6th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 599. ISBN 978-0-521-45868-9. Originally published in 1879, the 6th extended edition appeared first in 1932.

External links edit

  • Terminal Velocity - NASA site
  • Onboard video of Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters rapidly decelerating to terminal velocity on entry to the thicker atmosphere, from 2,900 miles per hour (Mach 3.8) at 5:15 in the video, to 220  mph at 6:45 when the parachutes are deployed 90 seconds later—NASA video and sound, @ io9.com.
  • Terminal settling velocity of a sphere at all realistic Reynolds Numbers, by Heywood Tables approach.

terminal, velocity, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, this, article, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news. For other uses see Terminal velocity disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this article Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Terminal velocity news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Terminal velocity is the maximum velocity speed attainable by an object as it falls through a fluid air is the most common example It occurs when the sum of the drag force Fd and the buoyancy is equal to the downward force of gravity FG acting on the object Since the net force on the object is zero the object has zero acceleration 1 For objects falling through regular air the buoyant force is usually dismissed and not taken into account as its effects are negligible citation needed The downward force of gravity Fg equals the restraining force of drag Fd plus the buoyancy The net force on the object is zero and the result is that the velocity of the object remains constant In fluid dynamics an object is moving at its terminal velocity if its speed is constant due to the restraining force exerted by the fluid through which it is moving 2 As the speed of an object increases so does the drag force acting on it which also depends on the substance it is passing through for example air or water At some speed the drag or force of resistance will equal the gravitational pull on the object At this point the object stops accelerating and continues falling at a constant speed called the terminal velocity also called settling velocity An object moving downward faster than the terminal velocity for example because it was thrown downwards it fell from a thinner part of the atmosphere or it changed shape will slow down until it reaches the terminal velocity Drag depends on the projected area here represented by the object s cross section or silhouette in a horizontal plane An object with a large projected area relative to its mass such as a parachute has a lower terminal velocity than one with a small projected area relative to its mass such as a dart In general for the same shape and material the terminal velocity of an object increases with size This is because the downward force weight is proportional to the cube of the linear dimension but the air resistance is approximately proportional to the cross section area which increases only as the square of the linear dimension For very small objects such as dust and mist the terminal velocity is easily overcome by convection currents which can prevent them from reaching the ground at all and hence they can stay suspended in the air for indefinite periods Air pollution and fog are examples Contents 1 Examples 2 Physics 3 Applications 4 Terminal velocity in the presence of buoyancy force 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksExamples edit nbsp Graph of velocity versus time of a skydiver reaching a terminal velocity Based on air resistance for example the terminal speed of a skydiver in a belly to earth i e face down free fall position is about 55 m s 180 ft s 3 This speed is the asymptotic limiting value of the speed and the forces acting on the body balance each other more and more closely as the terminal speed is approached In this example a speed of 50 of terminal speed is reached after only about 3 seconds while it takes 8 seconds to reach 90 15 seconds to reach 99 and so on Higher speeds can be attained if the skydiver pulls in their limbs see also freeflying In this case the terminal speed increases to about 90 m s 300 ft s 3 which is almost the terminal speed of the peregrine falcon diving down on its prey 4 The same terminal speed is reached for a typical 30 06 bullet dropping downwards when it is returning to the ground having been fired upwards or dropped from a tower according to a 1920 U S Army Ordnance study 5 Competition speed skydivers fly in a head down position and can reach speeds of 150 m s 490 ft s citation needed The current record is held by Felix Baumgartner who jumped from an altitude of 38 887 m 127 582 ft and reached 380 m s 1 200 ft s though he achieved this speed at high altitude where the density of the air is much lower than at the Earth s surface producing a correspondingly lower drag force 6 The biologist J B S Haldane wrote To the mouse and any smaller animal gravity presents practically no dangers You can drop a mouse down a thousand yard mine shaft and on arriving at the bottom it gets a slight shock and walks away A rat is killed a man is broken a horse splashes For the resistance presented to movement by the air is proportional to the surface of the moving object Divide an animal s length breadth and height each by ten its weight is reduced to a thousandth but its surface only to a hundredth So the resistance to falling in the case of the small animal is relatively ten times greater than the driving force 7 Physics editUsing mathematical terms terminal speed without considering buoyancy effects is given byV t 2 m g r A C d displaystyle V t sqrt frac 2mg rho AC d nbsp where V t displaystyle V t nbsp represents terminal velocity m displaystyle m nbsp is the mass of the falling object g displaystyle g nbsp is the acceleration due to gravity C d displaystyle C d nbsp is the drag coefficient r displaystyle rho nbsp is the density of the fluid through which the object is falling and A displaystyle A nbsp is the projected area of the object 8 In reality an object approaches its terminal speed asymptotically Buoyancy effects due to the upward force on the object by the surrounding fluid can be taken into account using Archimedes principle the mass m displaystyle m nbsp has to be reduced by the displaced fluid mass r V displaystyle rho V nbsp with V displaystyle V nbsp the volume of the object So instead of m displaystyle m nbsp use the reduced mass m r m r V displaystyle m r m rho V nbsp in this and subsequent formulas The terminal speed of an object changes due to the properties of the fluid the mass of the object and its projected cross sectional surface area Air density increases with decreasing altitude at about 1 per 80 metres 260 ft see barometric formula For objects falling through the atmosphere for every 160 metres 520 ft of fall the terminal speed decreases 1 After reaching the local terminal velocity while continuing the fall speed decreases to change with the local terminal speed Using mathematical terms defining down to be positive the net force acting on an object falling near the surface of Earth is according to the drag equation F net m a m g 1 2 r v 2 A C d displaystyle F text net ma mg frac 1 2 rho v 2 AC d nbsp with v t the velocity of the object as a function of time t At equilibrium the net force is zero Fnet 0 9 and the velocity becomes the terminal velocity limt v t Vt m g 1 2 r V t 2 A C d 0 displaystyle mg 1 over 2 rho V t 2 AC d 0 nbsp Solving for Vt yields V t 2 m g r A C d displaystyle V t sqrt frac 2mg rho AC d nbsp 5 The drag equation is assuming r g and Cd to be constants m a m d v d t m g 1 2 r v 2 A C d displaystyle ma m frac mathrm d v mathrm d t mg frac 1 2 rho v 2 AC d nbsp Although this is a Riccati equation that can be solved by reduction to a second order linear differential equation it is easier to separate variables A more practical form of this equation can be obtained by making the substitution a2 rACd 2mg Dividing both sides by m givesd v d t g 1 a 2 v 2 displaystyle frac mathrm d v mathrm d t g left 1 alpha 2 v 2 right nbsp The equation can be re arranged intod t d v g 1 a 2 v 2 displaystyle mathrm d t frac mathrm d v g 1 alpha 2 v 2 nbsp Taking the integral of both sides yields 0 t d t 1 g 0 v d v 1 a 2 v 2 displaystyle int 0 t mathrm d t 1 over g int 0 v frac mathrm d v 1 alpha 2 v prime 2 nbsp After integration this becomest 0 1 g ln 1 a v 2 a ln 1 a v 2 a C v 0 v v 1 g ln 1 a v 1 a v 2 a C v 0 v v displaystyle t 0 1 over g left ln 1 alpha v over 2 alpha frac ln 1 alpha v 2 alpha C right v 0 v v 1 over g left ln frac 1 alpha v 1 alpha v over 2 alpha C right v 0 v v nbsp or in a simpler formt 1 2 a g ln 1 a v 1 a v a r t a n h a v a g displaystyle t 1 over 2 alpha g ln frac 1 alpha v 1 alpha v frac mathrm artanh alpha v alpha g nbsp with artanh the inverse hyperbolic tangent function Alternatively 1 a tanh a g t v displaystyle frac 1 alpha tanh alpha gt v nbsp with tanh the hyperbolic tangent function Assuming that g is positive which it was defined to be and substituting a back in the speed v becomes v 2 m g r A C d tanh t g r A C d 2 m displaystyle v sqrt frac 2mg rho AC d tanh left t sqrt frac g rho AC d 2m right nbsp Using the formula for terminal velocityV t 2 m g r A C d displaystyle V t sqrt frac 2mg rho AC d nbsp the equation can be rewritten as v V t tanh t g V t displaystyle v V t tanh left t frac g V t right nbsp As time tends to infinity t the hyperbolic tangent tends to 1 resulting in the terminal speedV t lim t v t 2 m g r A C d displaystyle V t lim t to infty v t sqrt frac 2mg rho AC d nbsp nbsp Creeping flow past a sphere streamlines drag force Fd and force by gravity FgFor very slow motion of the fluid the inertia forces of the fluid are negligible assumption of massless fluid in comparison to other forces Such flows are called creeping or Stokes flows and the condition to be satisfied for the flows to be creeping flows is the Reynolds number R e 1 displaystyle Re ll 1 nbsp The equation of motion for creeping flow simplified Navier Stokes equation is given by p m 2 v displaystyle mathbf nabla p mu nabla 2 mathbf v nbsp where v displaystyle mathbf v nbsp is the fluid velocity vector field p displaystyle p nbsp is the fluid pressure field m displaystyle mu nbsp is the liquid fluid viscosity The analytical solution for the creeping flow around a sphere was first given by Stokes in 1851 10 From Stokes solution the drag force acting on the sphere of diameter d displaystyle d nbsp can be obtained as D 3 p m d V or C d 24 R e displaystyle D 3 pi mu dV qquad text or qquad C d frac 24 Re nbsp 6 where the Reynolds number R e r d m V displaystyle Re frac rho d mu V nbsp The expression for the drag force given by equation 6 is called Stokes law When the value of C d displaystyle C d nbsp is substituted in the equation 5 we obtain the expression for terminal speed of a spherical object moving under creeping flow conditions 11 V t g d 2 18 m r s r displaystyle V t frac gd 2 18 mu left rho s rho right nbsp where r s displaystyle rho s nbsp is the density of the object Applications editThe creeping flow results can be applied in order to study the settling of sediments near the ocean bottom and the fall of moisture drops in the atmosphere The principle is also applied in the falling sphere viscometer an experimental device used to measure the viscosity of highly viscous fluids for example oil paraffin tar etc Terminal velocity in the presence of buoyancy force edit nbsp Settling velocity Ws of a sand grain diameter d density 2650 kg m3 in water at 20 C computed with the formula of Soulsby 1997 When the buoyancy effects are taken into account an object falling through a fluid under its own weight can reach a terminal velocity settling velocity if the net force acting on the object becomes zero When the terminal velocity is reached the weight of the object is exactly balanced by the upward buoyancy force and drag force That is W F b D displaystyle W F b D nbsp 1 where W displaystyle W nbsp is the weight of the object F b displaystyle F b nbsp is the buoyancy force acting on the object and D displaystyle D nbsp is the drag force acting on the object If the falling object is spherical in shape the expression for the three forces are given below W p 6 d 3 r s g displaystyle W frac pi 6 d 3 rho s g nbsp 2 F b p 6 d 3 r g displaystyle F b frac pi 6 d 3 rho g nbsp 3 D C d 1 2 r V 2 A displaystyle D C d frac 1 2 rho V 2 A nbsp 4 where d displaystyle d nbsp is the diameter of the spherical object g displaystyle g nbsp is the gravitational acceleration r displaystyle rho nbsp is the density of the fluid r s displaystyle rho s nbsp is the density of the object A 1 4 p d 2 displaystyle A frac 1 4 pi d 2 nbsp is the projected area of the sphere C d displaystyle C d nbsp is the drag coefficient and V displaystyle V nbsp is the characteristic velocity taken as terminal velocity V t displaystyle V t nbsp Substitution of equations 2 4 in equation 1 and solving for terminal velocity V t displaystyle V t nbsp to yield the following expression V t 4 g d 3 C d r s r r displaystyle V t sqrt frac 4gd 3C d left frac rho s rho rho right nbsp 5 In equation 1 it is assumed that the object is denser than the fluid If not the sign of the drag force should be made negative since the object will be moving upwards against gravity Examples are bubbles formed at the bottom of a champagne glass and helium balloons The terminal velocity in such cases will have a negative value corresponding to the rate of rising up See also editStokes s law Terminal ballisticsReferences edit 6 4 Drag Force and Terminal Speed University Physics Volume 1 OpenStax openstax org 19 September 2016 Retrieved 2023 07 15 Riazi A Turker U January 2019 The drag coefficient and settling velocity of natural sediment particles Computational Particle Mechanics 6 3 427 437 Bibcode 2019CPM 6 427R doi 10 1007 s40571 019 00223 6 S2CID 127789299 a b Huang Jian 1998 Elert Glenn ed Speed of a skydiver terminal velocity The Physics Factbook Retrieved 2022 01 25 All About the Peregrine Falcon U S Fish and Wildlife Service December 20 2007 Archived from the original on March 8 2010 The Ballistician March 2001 Bullets in the Sky W Square Enterprises 9826 Sagedale Houston Texas 77089 Archived from the original on 2008 03 31 Garbino Alejandro Blue Rebecca S Pattarini James M Law Jennifer Clark Jonathan B February 2014 Physiological Monitoring and Analysis of a Manned Stratospheric Balloon Test Program Aviation Space and Environmental Medicine 85 2 177 178 doi 10 3357 ASEM 3744 2014 PMID 24597163 Haldane J B S March 1926 On Being the Right Size Harper s Magazine March 1926 Archived from the original on 2015 04 15 Alt URL Cousens Roger Dytham Calvin Law Richard 2008 Dispersal in Plants A Population Perspective Oxford University Press pp 26 27 ISBN 978 0 19 929911 9 Massel Stanislaw R 1999 Fluid Mechanics for Marine Ecologists Springer Science Business Media p 22 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 60209 2 ISBN 978 3 642 60209 2 Stokes G G 1851 On the effect of internal friction of fluids on the motion of pendulums Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 9 part ii 8 106 Bibcode 1851TCaPS 9 8S The formula for terminal velocity V appears on p 52 equation 127 Lamb H 1994 Hydrodynamics 6th ed Cambridge University Press p 599 ISBN 978 0 521 45868 9 Originally published in 1879 the 6th extended edition appeared first in 1932 External links editTerminal Velocity NASA site Onboard video of Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters rapidly decelerating to terminal velocity on entry to the thicker atmosphere from 2 900 miles per hour Mach 3 8 at 5 15 in the video to 220 mph at 6 45 when the parachutes are deployed 90 seconds later NASA video and sound io9 com Terminal settling velocity of a sphere at all realistic Reynolds Numbers by Heywood Tables approach Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Terminal velocity amp oldid 1184656442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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