So I just started studying physics recently, and I came up with a question that I'm not sure how to solve, and I think it may be because of some fundamental misunderstanding. I don't want anyone to answer the problem, I'm just providing it for context.
The problem: Let's say a man is a distance h from the ground, and he has an indestructible box underneath him. He begins falling straight down, and once he's a distance d from the ground, he pushes straight down on the box. How much force must he push with to counteract the falling, reset his net velocity to 0, and land safely, assuming the force isn't great enough to shatter his skeleton. Also ignoring air resistance.
I figured this would be a trivial kinematics problem (maybe it is), but as I played with the equations I realized I had two conflicting intuitions:
- On one hand, there's only one constant force acting on him: gravity. If that's the case, shouldn't the force required to counteract the falling also remain constant (i.e. not dependent on the height from which he falls)?
- On the other hand, the amount of force one hits the ground with increases with fall height, so how is that force varying?
Clearly I'm missing something key here; any help is appreciated.