What is terminal velocity? (falling bodies)

When an object falls down through a fluid (e.g. water, oil, air..) there are usually two forces acting on it. They are the weight force acting downwards and the drag force acting upwards. The weight force comes from the gravitational attraction between the object and the earth, and the drag force is caused by collisions between the object and the particles that make up the fluid- as the objects falls it bumps into the particles of the liquid. When the weight force and the drag force balance, there is no resultant force acting on the object. With no resultant force acting on the object, its velocity will remain constant, and this is what is known as its terminal velocity. Lets do an example. Imagine a skydiver jumping out of a plane, so here the object is the skydiver and the fluid is the air. Just as the skydiver jumps out of the plane, his downward velocity is roughly zero. The drag force has a velocity dependence- the higher the velocity, the more often the skydiver bumps into the air particles, the higher the drag force. Therefore, when the skydiver's velocity is zero, the drag force is zero, so the only force acting on the skydiver is his weight, so the resultant force is downwards, and he accerlates downwards. `As he accelerates and his velocity increases, the drag force acting on him increases. This happens until the drag force and the weight force balance, and the skydiver reaches their terminal velocity.

GF
Answered by George F. Physics tutor

6079 Views

See similar Physics GCSE tutors

Related Physics GCSE answers

All answers ▸

A lamp has a rating of 18V 9W. How much energy is transferred to the bulb in 5 minutes? Calculate the current through it when connected to a 18V supply.


What is the doppler effect?


A pendulum has a frequency of 0.80 Hz, calculate the periodic time of the pendulum.


A man decides to shoot a rifle whilst on a wheelchair. Explain in terms of conservation of momentum what happens to the man as the shot is fired.


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

MyTutor is part of the IXL family of brands:

© 2026 by IXL Learning