If terminal velocity exists why do things burn up when entering the atmosphere?

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So, to my knowledge, things burn up when entering the atmosphere due to the friction caused by all of the air molecules hitting them on the way down which would make sense when an object gets faster, it hits more air molecules, and heats up, however, when an object reaches terminal velocity it no longer goes any faster, and objects that aren’t aerodynamic have a relatively low terminal velocity, meaning it may go just as fast being dropped from a tall building, and obviously, things don’t burn up (or even get hot) when being dropped from a tall building. So my question is why exactly being something falling into the atmosphere will burn up, but not if it’s dropped at a much lower height that would still reach it’s terminal velocity.

In: Physics

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Anonymous 0 Comments

The object enters the atmosphere at potentially hundreds of times terminal velocity…then the air tries to slow it to that terminal velocity…imagine the sheer force involved in slowing down a huge rock by thousands of kilometers a second

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