phonypapercut56 wrote...
As stated in a previous post, G-forces aren't due to gravity. Felt because of acceleration. And gravitational fields are not a factor in a spinning room on a ship.Jake71887 wrote...
phonypapercut56 wrote...
I'm sorry you feel that way, but I don't know where to start. To answer the original question, yes you feel "G's" in space. Has nothing to do with whether or not there is an atmosphere. Also I don't know what these "fields" you were talking about in your post are reffering to.Jake71887 wrote...
phonypapercut56 wrote...
Oh my...science is crying right now.
If I'm wrong, correct me... But I haven't seen you contribute one constructive thing to the discussion... Seems like you're just trolling
As far as I know, there's little to no resistance in space once you're away from the gravitational pull of an object in space... So why would there be G's if there's nothing acting against you?
And the fields were gravitational fields, as I stated earlier in the post...
Didn't say G-forces were a result, said they were a factor... Weightless environment(AKA no gravity), you don't feel Gs.
And yes gravitational fields are a factor... In the spinning room would be an artificial gravity field, and your movement in that field would affect your body, varying on how fast you moved...




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