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Hello
My question is concerning what we see in movies and reality. I see a bunch of movies that when space shuttle going straight up, when it reaches the outer sphere, the astronauts seems to be floating. is this true in real life? do they float in the shuttle in the free space? thanks K |
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![]() "captoro" wrote in message ... My question is concerning what we see in movies and reality. I see a bunch of movies that when space shuttle going straight up, when it reaches the outer sphere, the astronauts seems to be floating. is this true in real life? do they float in the shuttle in the free space? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weightlessness http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microgravity http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free-fall Jeff -- A clever person solves a problem. A wise person avoids it. -- Einstein |
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In sci.space.shuttle message fdbae3cc-42a6-4785-8377-008becf6e232@w39g2
000prb.googlegroups.com, Mon, 20 Oct 2008 09:14:30, captoro posted: My question is concerning what we see in movies and reality. I see a bunch of movies that when space shuttle going straight up, when it reaches the outer sphere, the astronauts seems to be floating. is this true in real life? do they float in the shuttle in the free space? Use http://www.nasa.gov/55644main_NASATV_Windows.asx for a while, and decide for yourself. Or ask your science teacher. -- (c) John Stockton, nr London, UK. Turnpike v6.05 MIME. Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQqish topics, acronyms & links; Astro stuff via astron-1.htm, gravity0.htm ; quotings.htm, pascal.htm, etc. No Encoding. Quotes before replies. Snip well. Write clearly. Don't Mail News. |
#4
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Are you meaning when the engines cut off. I think this is what you men. The
answer is yes. When power is removed its in free fall, even though it may still be going up, its not accelerating. Brian -- Brian Gaff....Note, this account does not accept Bcc: email. graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them Email: __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________ "captoro" wrote in message ... Hello My question is concerning what we see in movies and reality. I see a bunch of movies that when space shuttle going straight up, when it reaches the outer sphere, the astronauts seems to be floating. is this true in real life? do they float in the shuttle in the free space? thanks K |
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On Oct 21, 3:14*am, captoro wrote:
Hello My question is concerning what we see in movies and reality. I see a bunch of movies that when *space shuttle going straight up, when it reaches the outer sphere, the astronauts seems to be floating. is this true in real life? do they float in the shuttle in the free space? thanks There are so many misconceptions out there about "weighlessness". I frequently get asked how high you have to be before there is no gravity. The shuttle flies only a few hundred kilometers above earth where the pull of gravity is only very slightly less than on the surface. BUT as soon as those engines shut down, the shuttle is in free fall, a bit like being in an elevator when the cable has broken. Both you and the shuttle ( or elevator) are being pulled by gravity so you feel weightless because your floor is falling with you. While the engines are running the spacecraft is accelerating and pushing you against your seat, and you will feel "weight" or at least what feels like weight where "down" is in the direction opposite to your acceleration. Does that make sense to you ? Terry |
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On Oct 20, 11:14*am, captoro wrote:
Hello My question is concerning what we see in movies and reality. I see a bunch of movies that when *space shuttle going straight up, when it reaches the outer sphere, the astronauts seems to be floating. is this true in real life? do they float in the shuttle in the free space? thanks K If the shuttle expended all of it's fuel flying straight up. it would fall all the way back down to the Earth. After the engines quit, the astronauts would feel weightlessness as soon as the engines stopped firing. Then they would float in zero-gee as the spacecraft would begin to plunge back into the atmosphere. They would get a gradual buildup of gees as the shuttle would encounter the friction caused by the atmosphere, but the shuttle would soon burn up as the temperature buildup would exceed the design limits of the shuttles Thermal Protection System. In a normal shuttle flight, the shuttle is first launched vertically to clear the denser parts of the atmosphere, then is sent on a trajectory more parallel to the earth's curvature. So by the time it gets to MECO, it is near orbital velocity. that is, just enough velocity to keep the shuttle from falling back into the atmosphere. They then fire the OMS engines to add the final push in velocity to keep it above the atmosphere. The best way I learned orbital mechanics was to see Newton's original diagram of a cannon firing a cannon ball off of a mountain whose peak was above the atmosphere. If you fired it with less velocity, it would keep falling back to the earth. But with enough added powder, the ball would fall away with the same curvature as the earth's surface, so it would "fall" al lthe way around the earth without touching it. This why zero-gee or weightlessness is also sometimes called "free fall" You are literally falling around the earth. I hope this was not trolling..... |
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