AbraCalc

Terminal Velocity of a 2 mm Raindrop

A 2 mm raindrop (about 4.2 mg) falls at a terminal velocity of roughly 6–7 m/s through standard air.

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How to use this tool

  1. Enter mass, gravitational acceleration, drag coefficient cd, fluid density ρ and cross-sectional area a in the fields above.
  2. Results update instantly as you type — or click Calculate.
  3. Read your terminal velocity and the full breakdown beneath it.

Small raindrops fall gently because their low mass and high drag coefficient keep terminal velocity well below 10 m/s.

Frequently asked questions

What is a typical skydiver terminal velocity?
In a spread-eagle position (Cd≈1.0, A≈0.7 m²) around 55–60 m/s (200 km/h). Head-down (Cd≈0.7, A≈0.3 m²) can reach ~80 m/s (290 km/h).
What drag coefficient should I use?
Sphere: 0.47, cube: 1.05, flat disk: 1.17, skydiver prone: ~1.0, streamlined body: 0.04–0.1.