Terminal Speed Calculator
Calculate the terminal velocity of an object falling through a fluid (air or liquid) based on physical properties.
Terminal Speed Results
Comprehensive Guide: How to Calculate Terminal Speed
Terminal speed (or terminal velocity) is the maximum velocity attained by an object as it falls through a fluid (such as air or water) under the influence of gravity. At terminal speed, the drag force (air resistance) equals the gravitational force, resulting in zero net acceleration.
Key Physics Principles Behind Terminal Speed
The calculation relies on three fundamental forces:
- Gravitational Force (Fg): Pulls the object downward (Fg = m × g).
- Buoyant Force (Fb): Opposes gravity due to displaced fluid (Fb = ρfluid × V × g).
- Drag Force (Fd): Resists motion through the fluid (Fd = ½ × ρ × v² × Cd × A).
The Terminal Speed Formula
The terminal speed (vt) is derived by equating drag force to the net gravitational force:
vt = √[(2 × m × g) / (ρ × Cd × A)]
Where:
- m = mass of the object (kg)
- g = gravitational acceleration (9.81 m/s² on Earth)
- ρ = fluid density (kg/m³; e.g., 1.225 for air, 1000 for water)
- Cd = drag coefficient (dimensionless; ~0.47 for a sphere, ~1.0 for a cylinder)
- A = cross-sectional area (m²)
Drag Coefficient (Cd) Values for Common Shapes
| Object Shape | Drag Coefficient (Cd) | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Sphere (smooth) | 0.47 | Raindrop, marble |
| Sphere (rough) | 0.5–0.6 | Golf ball, dimpled sphere |
| Cylinder (axis perpendicular) | 1.0–1.2 | Pencil falling sideways |
| Flat plate (perpendicular) | 1.28 | Falling leaf (broadside) |
| Streamlined body | 0.04–0.1 | Bullet, airplane wing |
Fluid Density Comparison
| Fluid | Density (kg/m³) | Terminal Speed Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Air (sea level, 15°C) | 1.225 | Higher terminal speed (less resistance) |
| Fresh Water (20°C) | 998 | Moderate terminal speed |
| Salt Water (20°C) | 1025 | Lower terminal speed (more resistance) |
| Oil (typical) | 800–900 | Higher terminal speed than water |
| Honey | 1400 | Very low terminal speed |
Real-World Examples of Terminal Speed
- Skydiver (belly-to-earth): ~53 m/s (190 km/h or 120 mph) in air.
- Raindrop (1mm diameter): ~4 m/s (14 km/h) due to high surface-area-to-mass ratio.
- Baseball: ~43 m/s (155 km/h) when thrown upward and falling back.
- Ping pong ball: ~9 m/s (32 km/h) due to light weight and large drag.
Step-by-Step Calculation Process
- Gather Inputs:
- Measure or estimate the object’s mass (m).
- Determine the cross-sectional area (A) facing the fluid flow.
- Select the drag coefficient (Cd) based on shape.
- Identify the fluid density (ρ).
- Plug into the Formula:
Substitute values into vt = √[(2 × m × g) / (ρ × Cd × A)].
- Calculate:
Compute the numerator (2 × m × g) and denominator (ρ × Cd × A), then take the square root.
- Convert Units (if needed):
Multiply by 3.6 to convert m/s to km/h, or by 2.237 to convert m/s to mph.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Incorrect Drag Coefficient: Using a generic value (e.g., 1.0) for all shapes. Always match Cd to the object’s geometry.
- Ignoring Buoyancy: For dense fluids (e.g., water), buoyant force can significantly reduce net gravity. The formula above assumes buoyancy is negligible (valid for air).
- Unit Mismatches: Ensure all units are consistent (e.g., kg, m, s). Mixing grams with kilograms will yield incorrect results.
- Assuming Constant Density: Fluid density changes with altitude (for air) or temperature (for liquids). Use context-appropriate values.
Advanced Considerations
Reynolds Number (Re)
The drag coefficient (Cd) depends on the Reynolds number (Re = ρvD/μ), where:
- v = velocity
- D = characteristic length (e.g., diameter)
- μ = dynamic viscosity of the fluid
For Re << 1 (creeping flow), Cd ≈ 24/Re. For Re >> 1 (turbulent flow), Cd stabilizes (~0.44 for a sphere).
Compressibility Effects
At speeds approaching Mach 0.3 (100 m/s in air), compressibility alters drag. The standard formula assumes incompressible flow.
Non-Spherical Objects
For irregular shapes, use the equivalent diameter (diameter of a sphere with the same cross-sectional area) and adjust Cd empirically.
Practical Applications
- Aerospace Engineering: Designing parachutes and re-entry vehicles to control terminal speed.
- Automotive Safety: Calculating impact speeds for crash tests.
- Environmental Science: Modeling sediment transport in rivers or pollen dispersal.
- Sports: Optimizing projectile trajectories (e.g., javelin, golf balls).
Authoritative Resources
For further reading, consult these expert sources:
- NASA’s Terminal Velocity Explanation (NASA Glenn Research Center)
- MIT Lecture on Drag Forces (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- NIST Fluid Dynamics Standards (National Institute of Standards and Technology)