KYsissy
Posts: 781
Joined: 5/12/2005 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: MasterCaneman quote:
ORIGINAL: KYsissy quote:
ORIGINAL: MasterCaneman quote:
ORIGINAL: KYsissy quote:
ORIGINAL: MasterCaneman I'm too busy to dig out the formula, but the deceleration is equal to their initial entry velocity when they enter the atmosphere. Some of the older Soviet capsules would go to six Gs coming back in. Humans can usually handle up to 9 for short periods of time. 10 meters per second squared is the gravitational constant for Earth. As for the Soviet capsules hitting 6 g's, that can only be when they hit the denser atmosphere and decelerated. In a vacuum, they would maintain 1 g acceleration and the feeling of weightlessness. If they maintained a 1G acceleration, they would have Earth-normal gravity aboard, not weightlessness. The space station and all the satellites have a 1 g acceleration and experience weightlessness. That is all the earth is capable of due to gravity alone. The moon is roughly 1/6 of g on earth. Acceleration can also be a change in direction of the velocity vector. Which is where the 6 gs jet pilots experience comes from. Anything in orbit is considered to be 'falling', as opposed to being under acceleration. If you had a vehicle undergoing constant 1G acceleration, you would have normal gravity. The reason they're weightless is because they're falling freely in their direction of travel. Now, if they were at a fixed point in relationship to a body, they would experience the same (or nearly so) of that body. A velocity vector has a magnitude and a direction. Acceleration is a change in either or both of those. In orbit the magnitude of the vector is constant, the speed is not changing. But the direction of that vector is constantly changing, thus it is accelerating.
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"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went." Will Rogers, 1897-1935
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