When two things fall from the same height, they hit the ground at the same time even if one is heavier than the other.
Imagine you're playing with your favorite toy car and a tiny marble, both are on a ramp. You push them both at the same time. Even though the toy car is bigger and heavier, it still rolls down the ramp at the same speed as the little marble. That’s because gravity pulls both of them equally, just like you're pushing them both with the same force.
Why It Happens
Gravity is like a friendly pull that wants to bring everything down to Earth. It doesn’t care if something is big or small, it pulls on everything. But here's the fun part: even though gravity pulls harder on heavier things, those heavier things also have more "push" or inertia, which makes them slower to start moving.
It’s like pushing a heavy shopping cart versus a light toy wagon. The heavy one is harder to get going, but once it moves, it keeps going just as fast as the light one, because gravity helps both of them along the way!
So whether you're a marble or a toy car, when you fall, you all race down together! 🌟
Examples
- Kids drop balls of different sizes on the playground and see them land together.
- A teacher drops two books with different weights, and both reach the floor together.
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See also
- Why acceleration due to gravity does not depend on mass?
- How Long To Fall Through The Earth?
- How does gravity work and why do objects fall towards Earth?
- Why does gravity make objects fall at the same rate regardless of mass?
- Why do things fall at the same speed regardless of weight?