Weightlessness mobility1

Pyro Pilots Lounge. For all topics *not* covered in other DBB forums.

Moderators: fliptw, roid

Post Reply
User avatar
Isaac
DBB Artist
DBB Artist
Posts: 7695
Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 8:47 am
Location: 🍕

Weightlessness mobility1

Post by Isaac »

Imagine you’re in space, you’re not wearing anything you can take off, and you cant use any orifice as a thruster. Also you're not near any object. Could you flail your body around to start moving in a direction or turn?
User avatar
Lothar
DBB Ghost Admin
DBB Ghost Admin
Posts: 12133
Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
Location: I'm so glad to be home
Contact:

Post by Lothar »

you couldn't move in any direction. Newton says for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Another way to think of it is you can't create net momentum. So the only way to get moving in any direction is to make something else move in another direction.

The same is true for creating angular momentum. You can't do it unless you have some mass to expel somehow.
User avatar
Chaos Death Saurer
DBB Ace
DBB Ace
Posts: 97
Joined: Wed Aug 23, 2006 8:10 am

Post by Chaos Death Saurer »

You could spin yourself. That's about it.
User avatar
Isaac
DBB Artist
DBB Artist
Posts: 7695
Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 8:47 am
Location: 🍕

Post by Isaac »

say if you did a fast 'sit up' and stopped. wouldn't that cause some kind of movement?
User avatar
Bet51987
DBB Alumni
DBB Alumni
Posts: 2791
Joined: Sun May 30, 2004 6:54 am
Location: USA

Re: Weightlessness mobility1

Post by Bet51987 »

Isaac wrote:Imagine you’re in space, you’re not wearing anything you can take off, and you cant use any orifice as a thruster. Also you're not near any object. Could you flail your body around to start moving in a direction or turn?
No to direction...Yes to a turn.

Newtons Law applies here in that a body at rest will remain at rest unless acted upon by a force. In the case you presented for direction, you have nothing to push against so the answer is no. You will never be able to move away from where you are so wailing your arms or hitting yourself will not work.

However,

You can twist your body around its center of gravity in a way that changes the direction you were facing so in a sense you have moved.... but not in any direction.

Bettina

EDIT....wow all the answers came at the same time
User avatar
ccb056
DBB Fleet Admiral
DBB Fleet Admiral
Posts: 2540
Joined: Wed Jul 31, 2002 2:01 am
Contact:

Post by ccb056 »

No, you would not be able to spin.

You would not able to twist your body to face a different direction either.
I haven't lost my mind, it's backed up on disk somewhere.
User avatar
Isaac
DBB Artist
DBB Artist
Posts: 7695
Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 8:47 am
Location: 🍕

Post by Isaac »

but if there was air around you could swim in it so at least then you could move around right?
User avatar
ccb056
DBB Fleet Admiral
DBB Fleet Admiral
Posts: 2540
Joined: Wed Jul 31, 2002 2:01 am
Contact:

Post by ccb056 »

no
I haven't lost my mind, it's backed up on disk somewhere.
User avatar
Mobius
DBB_Master
DBB_Master
Posts: 7940
Joined: Sun Jun 03, 2001 2:01 am
Location: Christchurch, New Zealand
Contact:

Post by Mobius »

Let's forget the physics lessons and just talk common sense.

NO: you can not move yourself in a vacuum. You need an \"equal and opposiute reaction\". So the only way youy could move is to throw something: you would then move in the opposite direction.

YES: you *CAN* spin yourself. All you have to do is begin moving your arms in counter rotating directions in circles. This will rotate your body. It might not be in the direction you want, and your space suit won't really let you whirl your arms fast enough to create any centripetal force (The force which makes gyroscopes remain pointing in the same direction, and wheels hard to turn, and motorcycles stable at speed) but the principle is sound. It might take you some time to learn how to control your orientation, but you can do it.

As to \"swimming\" in zero gravity with air around you - yup that'll work. You wouldn't like it though, and you'd need to be VERY well co-ordinated, because you have to create more drag on the back stroke than you do on the forward stroke. This is trickier than it sounds, you aren't just lifting your arms out of water to reduce drag.

Ideally you'd have some hand-held paddles, which you'd be able to rotate 90 degrees for the forward stroke.

As to being in space without a space suit - well, you're fucked, so it doesn't make a lot of difference.

Exposure to hard vacuum will render you unconscious in 12 seconds or less, and you die fairly quickly from then on, by asphixiation. The whole \"explosive decompression\" thing is a complete load of bull★■◆●: Your skin is well tough enough to stop you exploding. Your eyes won't pop-out either. You might, however, fart quite a bit in the first few seconds, and you could suffer a bleeding nose as your sinuses are damaged by the lack of pressure. This will; be the least of your worries though, because you'll be in quite a bit of pain (quite a bit indeed) due to the unfiltered solar radiation, which will be blistering exposed skin even before you pass out. You may also suffer from the classic divers' complaint if you try to retain air in your lungs: your lungs will literally allow air to seep into your upper torso, and from there it migrates into the neck - expanding it dramatically. The resulting flesh feels \"like poking scrunched up newspaper\". Either way: make sure you exhale and leave your mouth completely open until all the air is gone.

If you want to see an almost perfect representation of what it's like - the scene in 2001 where Dave comes back into the Discovery through the emergency air lock, without his helmet, is as close as it gets to reality. The time he spends exposed is on the upper limits of how long people can remain conscious. But, as long as you managed to hit the \"CYCLE\" button before you passed out, you'd wake up fine, albeit with a real nasty headache.
User avatar
ccb056
DBB Fleet Admiral
DBB Fleet Admiral
Posts: 2540
Joined: Wed Jul 31, 2002 2:01 am
Contact:

Post by ccb056 »

No, you can't swim in air. It's not dense enough, and easily compressible.

And spinning your arms around won't do anything.
I haven't lost my mind, it's backed up on disk somewhere.
User avatar
Isaac
DBB Artist
DBB Artist
Posts: 7695
Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 8:47 am
Location: 🍕

Post by Isaac »

you can fan ur self. so i would work.
User avatar
ccb056
DBB Fleet Admiral
DBB Fleet Admiral
Posts: 2540
Joined: Wed Jul 31, 2002 2:01 am
Contact:

Post by ccb056 »

youre right, if you have a jet engine then you can propel yourself through air
I haven't lost my mind, it's backed up on disk somewhere.
User avatar
Genghis
DBB Newbie
DBB Newbie
Posts: 1377
Joined: Fri Feb 12, 1999 3:01 am
Location: Ithaca, NY, USA

Post by Genghis »

If a bat can \"swim in air\" despite gravity, I don't see why a human couldn't move in air without gravity if he had a wing analogue (like Mobius's paddles). Not well or quickly, but he should be able to produce some movement. Treating the OP as a physics question and not a practical one.
User avatar
Bet51987
DBB Alumni
DBB Alumni
Posts: 2791
Joined: Sun May 30, 2004 6:54 am
Location: USA

Post by Bet51987 »

ccb056 wrote:No, you would not be able to spin.

You would not able to twist your body to face a different direction either.
Ummm... Your wrong. Sorry.

Bee
User avatar
Isaac
DBB Artist
DBB Artist
Posts: 7695
Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 8:47 am
Location: 🍕

Post by Isaac »

Ok it depends if you're in a vacuum or in air.
In a vacuum i don't think you could start a spin. I'll have to try a test in 3d studio max to see what would happen in the physics simulator.
User avatar
Krags
DBB Ace
DBB Ace
Posts: 362
Joined: Thu Feb 18, 1999 3:01 am

Post by Krags »

You could change your orientation just fine, just once you stopped flailing your limbs around you'd stop spinning and remain facing that direction.

I once saw a video of Skylab astronauts trying this very experiment. One of them carefully placed his colleague in the center of a large-enough room and that colleague then tried to move and turn. He was easily able to turn by spreading, twisting, and then closing his legs. He couldn't move himself from the center of the room, though.
User avatar
Lothar
DBB Ghost Admin
DBB Ghost Admin
Posts: 12133
Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
Location: I'm so glad to be home
Contact:

Post by Lothar »

Terminology note: momentum = mass * velocity; force = mass * acceleration. Velocity is the accumulated total (or integral) of acceleration, and momentum is the accumulated total (or integral) of force.
Krags wrote:You could change your orientation just fine, just once you stopped flailing your limbs around you'd stop spinning and remain facing that direction.
Exactly -- you couldn't create angular momentum. You can change your orientation by twirling your arms or legs such that they had angular momentum, which would give the core of your body an equal and opposite amount of angular momentum the other way... but the TOTAL angular momentum is still zero. As soon as you stop your arms, the rest of you stops as well.

Now, if we're changing the problem such that we're suspended in some sort of fluid, then you can move, spin, etc. All you have to do is give force/momentum to the fluid, giving yourself equal and opposite force/momentum. This is all just Newton's Third Law.

When a bird flies, its wings push air down and back. (When I worked for the Museum of Flight, I watched one of our brilliant former NASA scientists teach this to a bunch of five-year-olds using one of those rubberband-powered toy birds -- "do you feel the air blowing off of that? Some of it is coming back toward [kid A] and some of it is coming down toward [kid B], which is why the bird goes forward and stays up." I later adapted it to be a part of my Flying Gizmo show.) As long as we could create a mechanism for pushing whatever fluid we're imagining being suspended in back more than forward, we could "swim" through it, though perhaps not very quickly.
User avatar
ccb056
DBB Fleet Admiral
DBB Fleet Admiral
Posts: 2540
Joined: Wed Jul 31, 2002 2:01 am
Contact:

Post by ccb056 »

Right, you couldn't permanently change your original orientation.
I haven't lost my mind, it's backed up on disk somewhere.
User avatar
Bet51987
DBB Alumni
DBB Alumni
Posts: 2791
Joined: Sun May 30, 2004 6:54 am
Location: USA

Post by Bet51987 »

ccb056 wrote:Right, you couldn't permanently change your original orientation.
Yes you can.

Bee
Richard Cranium
DBB Supporter
DBB Supporter
Posts: 1444
Joined: Tue Aug 07, 2001 2:01 am

Post by Richard Cranium »

Granted it would be very difficult to survive long enough to do this but swinging your arms around in a circular motion would produce force that would rotate you around and basically provide you some attitude control. You just have to survive long enough and be able to produce enough angular momentum to create a centrifugal force.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control_moment_gyroscope

RC
User avatar
Grendel
3d Pro Master
3d Pro Master
Posts: 4390
Joined: Mon Oct 28, 2002 3:01 am
Location: Corvallis OR, USA

Post by Grendel »

Only works if there's a gravity field to \"push off\" from around.
ImageImage
User avatar
Foil
DBB Material Defender
DBB Material Defender
Posts: 4900
Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2004 3:31 pm
Location: Denver, Colorado, USA
Contact:

Post by Foil »

Bet51987 wrote:
ccb056 wrote:Right, you couldn't permanently change your original orientation.
Yes you can.

Bee
She (and everyone else who said so) is absolutely right.

Maybe you're thinking of movement like "bending your knees" and then "straightening". In that case, you'll end up exactly where you started.

But as RC mentioned, you could use movements like swinging your arms around to generate a turn, then opposite motion to slow/stop the turn at whatever point you needed.
User avatar
Spaceboy
DBB Captain
DBB Captain
Posts: 603
Joined: Sat Oct 02, 2004 11:43 pm
Contact:

Post by Spaceboy »

If you were naked in a vacuum and were somehow able to survive, you would not be able to create any momentum at all. you could twist around to face any direction you please, but you cant move from point A to B, and you cant flail to make yourself spin constantly. the only way it would be possible is if you were to spit, or urinate. Lol.

if there was air, of course you could move. it would just be much slower than swimming in water.

As a side fact, if you put a 45kg ball of mass a meter away from a 90kg ball of mass, perfectly motionless to start out with, gravity would pull them together in about 4 hours.
Richard Cranium
DBB Supporter
DBB Supporter
Posts: 1444
Joined: Tue Aug 07, 2001 2:01 am

Post by Richard Cranium »

Spaceboy wrote:If you were naked in a vacuum .... if you were to spit, or urinate.
I doubt you would be able to spit unless you still had air in your lungs to begin with. You might be able to slobber a little.

RC
User avatar
Lothar
DBB Ghost Admin
DBB Ghost Admin
Posts: 12133
Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
Location: I'm so glad to be home
Contact:

Post by Lothar »

Foil wrote:you could use movements like swinging your arms around to generate a turn, then opposite motion to slow/stop the turn at whatever point you needed.
Incorrect.

You could swing your arms to generate a turn, but as soon as your arms stopped, so would the turn. You wouldn't need to use "opposite motion".

Your arms moving already ARE the opposite motion from your body. You start stationary with your arms stationary, so the net angular momentum is zero. When you start spinning your arms, your body will counterrotate in order to maintain zero net angular momentum. And when you stop moving your arms, your body will stop leaving you with a total of zero angular momentum again.
User avatar
roid
DBB Master
DBB Master
Posts: 9990
Joined: Sun Dec 09, 2001 3:01 am
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Contact:

Re: Weightlessness mobility1

Post by roid »

Isaac wrote:Imagine you’re in space, you’re not wearing anything you can take off, and you cant use any orifice as a thruster. Also you're not near any object. Could you flail your body around to start moving in a direction or turn?
As people have said: you can rotate to face any direction (but the only way to give yourself a constant SPIN is to be constantly moving, once you stop, you stop spinning), but not move.
unless you have something like this...
here's some technologys that can get you moving in such a predicament:

If you're in open space, you can use solar wind (protons iirc), or the sun's emitted photons. With a "sail", you can then theoretically move anywhere away from the sun. If you are orbiting around a planet/moon or something then you can go anywhere you want because the sun will always be changing direction - just put your sail up during some times, and down during other times. I doubt it'd be too hard to equip a spacesuit with solar sails, sounds pretty cool actually.

OR, you might be able to harvest some reaction mass from space - Dust etc. Perhaps via electrostatics, i dunno. Then once you have some of this dust you can fire it away from you with some kindof particle accelerator. Hey, or you can just throw it.

Both techniques would take a while to build up momentum, but at least you'd be moving. It'd take you weeks, months, years to get anywhere.
User avatar
Top Gun
DBB Master
DBB Master
Posts: 8029
Joined: Wed Nov 13, 2002 3:01 am

Post by Top Gun »

The other (albeit rather inefficient) option is to take whatever loose crap happens to be Velcro-ed to your space suit and shove it in the opposite direction of where you want to go. :P
User avatar
ccb056
DBB Fleet Admiral
DBB Fleet Admiral
Posts: 2540
Joined: Wed Jul 31, 2002 2:01 am
Contact:

Post by ccb056 »

roid, why couldn't you sail towards the sun?

you can sail into the wind on a boat ...
I haven't lost my mind, it's backed up on disk somewhere.
Richard Cranium
DBB Supporter
DBB Supporter
Posts: 1444
Joined: Tue Aug 07, 2001 2:01 am

Post by Richard Cranium »

ccb056 wrote:roid, why couldn't you sail towards the sun?

you can sail into the wind on a boat ...
Well, you can't really sail in to the wind but you can tack in it's direction so I guess if you have a lot of time on your hands (and what else would you do if you're just floating in space) you could probably do it.
User avatar
roid
DBB Master
DBB Master
Posts: 9990
Joined: Sun Dec 09, 2001 3:01 am
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Contact:

Post by roid »

From how i understand sailing into the wind ON WATER: i don't think you can do that in space, coz on water you press against the water to do that - and in space there's nothing like that to press against (so no need for a rudder). Unless you want to bounce off planets/asteroids or even nebula, maybe that could work. Point being i think it only works if you have some mass to \"swim\" through.

Maybe you could do it while approaching relativistic speeds though - pressing off the fabric of spacetime itself?
User avatar
Genghis
DBB Newbie
DBB Newbie
Posts: 1377
Joined: Fri Feb 12, 1999 3:01 am
Location: Ithaca, NY, USA

Post by Genghis »

roid wrote:on water you press against the water to do that...Point being i think it only works if you have some mass to "swim" through.
Exactly. Or to put it another way: you can only sail at the interface between two mediums, and these mediums need to be in motion relative to each other. Sailboats "dip into" each medium.
Post Reply