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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "49._Does_it_feel_like_you're_on_Earth_at_all" retrieved in 0.019 sec with these stats:

  • "49" found 599 times in 475 documents
  • "doe" found 1502 times in 887 documents
  • "it" found 81427 times in 11675 documents
  • "feel" found 1428 times in 528 documents
  • "like" found 10632 times in 2766 documents
  • "you" found 35744 times in 1428 documents
  • "re" found 6996 times in 1551 documents
  • "on" found 78455 times in 14289 documents
  • "earth" found 21084 times in 7977 documents
  • "at" found 59261 times in 12664 documents
  • "all" found 19687 times in 5154 documents



... , which means eventually you will end up back on the ground. The air in your suit and the base will smell different, and will likely have a gunpowder tinge to it. There is nothing to hear in vacuum, though you'd feel the rare moonquake through the ground. Looking out across the Moon's surface your eyes would tell you that the ...
It feels great to float. Yes, you float the entire time you are in orbit, even in your sleeping bunk. It never is annoying except when you want to find some piece of equipment that you thought you had placed next to you ...
It's almost euphoric. The weightlessness and freedom of effortless movement is hard to describe. I can say that that you get a sense of total relaxation. The nights I slept in ...
... Earth, in orbit where astronauts visit often, you would feel weightless. In orbit, gravity still acts on you almost as strongly as it does on Earth but you are moving along with your surroundings so that it seems that you ... like a lot of fun and you can probably imagine lots of fun results. One very funny result is that if you spill your drink, it ...
... or inside the ISS when they are in space. It is similar to the feeling we would have on a free fall ride on a roller coaster in an amusement park when we suddenly ...
... cause a great deal of vibration and it is hard to read the displays. Once the boosters leave, sometimes with a jolt, it is like sitting on a big electric motor. The spacecraft just ...
At the beginning of lift off you experience 2 g's, and then build to 3 g's during the end. Obviously, you feel heavy if you weigh three times your normal weight. Nonetheless, this ...
Lift off is like getting rear-ended in a bumper car. Lying on your back, you instantly go from normal weight to twice your weight. Eight and a half minutes later, you go from ...
... 50 miles. Above that altitude turbulence stops. Astronauts experience bumps and strong vibrations at the lower altitudes during the launch. ---- Answer provided by Robert P. McCoy, Ph.D. Image: ...
... on your body, which would make it feel like there was no gravity (even though gravity is present and in fact controlling your path). The same theory applies to zero-gravity airplane flights, like ...

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