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From: Luigi Fortunati <fortunati.luigi@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: sci.physics.research
Subject: Re: Free fall
Date: Fri, 15 Mar 2024 01:11:39 PDT
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Lines: 30
Approved: Jonathan Thornburg [remove -color to reply]" <dr.j.thornburg@gmail-pink.com (sci.physics.research)
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In free fall, can you go anywhere freely or are there constraints that 
prevent this?

Of course you can't fall straight up and you can't fall sideways.

In free fall you can only go in one direction (the vertical one) and in 
only one versus (downward).

The elevator (in free fall) and everything inside it are forced to fall 
(always) vertically and (always) downwards.

So there is a constraint.

And, in free fall, can one move in a straight and uniform motion?

No, in free fall the motion is always accelerated.

The elevator (in free fall) and everything inside it are forced to 
always accelerate.

So there is another constraint.

So why call it "free fall" and not "forced fall"?

Luigi Fortunati.

[[Mod. note -- The "free" in "free fall" means that no non-gravitational
forces are acting on the falling body.  It's a statement about what forces
are (not) acting on the body, not about the uniqueness or non-uniqueness
of the resulting motion.  -- jt]]