Smittie61984 |
10-15-2012 08:25 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Homeslice
(Post 521536)
All I can tell you is that when I jumped from a plane, I definitely "felt" it in my stomach before any air resistance was felt. I am pretty sure this is due to the fluids and organs inside your body. If you jump from a plane, those things will try to stay where they were, causing them to rise up inside your body. Common sense says you'll feel that.
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You weren't in a vacuum. If unsure did your blood suddenly boil and your head explode and die? When you jumped out of the plane there was pressure and pressure affects your fluids differently. PV=nRT is the ideal gas law which you can argue for our basis relates to the entire unit(Everything inside Felix's space suit). n = moles which is mass. If you look at a periodic table, the number you see is grams/mole.
Weight is a Force and is derived from mass times gravity. When you weigh yourself on the scale you're actually taking the mass of yourself times the affect of gravity at that location (you weigh less at the equator because you are farther from the center of the earth).
Now going to the PV=nRT. Set the pressure to 0 and you get 0=nRT. Solve for n you get n=0. In a vacuum the weight of your cells, brain, suit, or the 2 ton steel balls Felix brought weigh to 0. For our purposes you can set Force=Weight. Our weight is 0 and our force is 0. a=(0 force)/m. You don't feel acceleration in a vacuum because relative to the unit of Felix, there is no acceleration.
Granted, no one knew until Kittinger went up in 1960.
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