When falling down with air resistance, y-axis vertical (positive is up), x-axis is horizontal, we have that: $F_y=-mg-kv=ma_y$, where $k$ is the drag coefficient. Now if the man opens the parachute, then I can analize it in two ways:
- At time $t_0$ of the deployment, I only change $k$ with $k_2>k$ and the rest stays the same.
- I consider that the parachute will take a period of time $\delta t$ to fully open and therefore I need to consider $k(t)$.
Now If my aim is to study the force felt when opening the parachute, how should I do it?
My first idea was to work with (1), but I didn't come up with anything interesting. The second idea was to consider the derivative of the acceleration, the jerk. Hence to consider $m\frac{d^3y}{dt^3}=-k\frac{d^2y}{dt^2}$ which is the derivative of the expression above for the force. However I don't know how to minimize it. It can't be zero, otherwise, nothing would change, right? Should I then consider $k$ as in (2) and use the chain rule when differentiating? And what should I do after that if I wanted to minimize this force felt when opening the parachute?