Can SUVAT equations be applied to real life free falling?
My brain is processing suvat equations Now fellow humans I am here to lay upon my continuous confusion in my expanding land of physics as I ask. “Is physics ever completely accurate" I'm genuinely looking for answers This thought came to me when we were learning about the freefall experiment at a level, when you drop a metal ball by switching off a magnet and the ball passes through the light gate and you use suvat to find the acceleration which is meant to be 9.81 rounded. My problem was there is obviously some residual magnetism from when the magnet is switched off I mean the ball kind of turned into an induced magnet it needs time to lose its magnetism so doesn't this make the experiment non-accurate as if time is recorded it will be wrong as the time it took to lose its magnetism is taken into account when it was not falling at the acceleration 9.81. Now my brain is going through the jibber jabber searching my head and I’m starting to wonder are there any physics e...