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by geph2021 1526 days ago

  the cat experiences "zero-g" as it accelerates towards terminal velocity
I think you meant the cat experiences 'zero-g' AFTER it's done accelerating and has reached terminal velocity.

I'm guessing in most cat falling situations the cat does not reach terminal velocity, so it is accelerating the whole time and can adjust based on the direction of acceleration.

1 comments

No. Terminal velocity is one-g, the same as sitting in a chair. A skydiver at terminal velocity feels exactly as much force/acceleration from the wind as they would feel force from lying down on the ground.
That's right, the forces cancel each other out, so that's "zero-g".

If you're accelerating, you're experience some "g" force, not "zero-g".

I’m sitting on the toilet right now, and the forces are canceling each other out so that I’m not sitting in the toilet. Is this 0g?
Except acceleration due to gravity. Freefall is acceleration without feeling any apparent force.