9.8 meters is how far something falls in one second when you drop it near Earth.
Imagine you're holding a ball on a windowsill. When you let go, it starts falling down, that’s gravity at work. After just one second, the ball has fallen about 9.8 meters, which is like falling from the top of a very tall slide or a big staircase.
How Fast You Fall
When you drop something, it doesn’t fall slowly, it speeds up as it goes down. In the first second, it travels 9.8 meters. By the second second, it's gone much farther because it’s falling faster now.
A Real-Life Comparison
Think about a big staircase. If each step is about half a meter high, that means 9.8 meters is like taking about 20 steps in one go, pretty far for just one second of falling!
So next time you drop something and watch it fall, remember: it's not magic, it’s physics doing its thing!
Examples
- A ball dropped from a height falls faster each second due to gravity, this is related to 9.8 meters.
- If you jump, your speed increases by about 9.8 meters every second until you land.
- On Earth, the pull of gravity causes objects to fall at around 9.8 meters per second squared.
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See also
- What is 9.8 m/s²?
- How Does Gravity Explained Simply Work?
- What Everyone Gets Wrong About Gravity?
- How does gravity actually work at a fundamental level?
- How do I explain to a six year old why people on the other side of the Earth?