When a heavier and a lighter object are dropped simultaneously from the same height in a vacuum, what happens to their accelerations?

In a vacuum, where air resistance is negligible, both the heavier and lighter objects will experience the same acceleration due to gravity. This is a fundamental principle of universal free fall, as established by Galileo. In the absence of external forces, all objects, regardless of their mass, fall towards the Earth with the same acceleration, approximately 9.81 meters per second squared.