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Скачать с ютуб Why zero gravity is a myth: The amazing science of 'floating' astronauts | NASA's Michelle Thaller в хорошем качестве

Why zero gravity is a myth: The amazing science of 'floating' astronauts | NASA's Michelle Thaller 6 лет назад


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Why zero gravity is a myth: The amazing science of 'floating' astronauts | NASA's Michelle Thaller

Why zero gravity is a myth: The amazing science of 'floating' astronauts New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink Join Big Think Edge for exclusive video lessons from top thinkers and doers: https://bigth.ink/Edge ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- When we launched our 'Ask an astronomer' series with NASA's Michelle Thaller, one set of questions stood out from hundreds, arriving by way of the curious and clever students at Courthill Infant School, Poole, in the south of England. Representing all the aspiring scientists in Dragonflies Class, Joshua, age 4, asked NASA's Michelle Thaller a brilliant question: "Why is there no gravity in space?" Here, Thaller explains the incredible science behind why astronauts appear to float in space, which is an interesting misconception fuelled by the term 'zero gravity'. (In fact, there is a small amount of gravity found everywhere in space, which is why microgravity is a more accurate term.) So what are they doing if not floating? They're actually constantly free falling, says Thaller, and so are you, the person beside you, and the entire planet Earth. It's a high-velocity orbit that allows astronauts to seemingly defy gravity, soaring so fast around the planet that they remain suspended instead of succumbing to Earth's gravitational pull. Michelle Thaller explains the very cool science of how orbits allow astronauts to seemingly defy gravity. You can follow Michelle Thaller on Twitter at @mlthaller. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MICHELLE THALLER : Dr. Michelle Thaller is an astronomer who studies binary stars and the life cycles of stars. She is Assistant Director of Science Communication at NASA. She went to college at Harvard University, completed a post-doctoral research fellowship at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in Pasadena, Calif. then started working for the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's (JPL) Spitzer Space Telescope. After a hugely successful mission, she moved on to NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC), in the Washington D.C. area. In her off-hours often puts on about 30lbs of Elizabethan garb and performs intricate Renaissance dances. For more information, visit NASA. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TRANSCRIPT: Michelle Thaller: Joshua, you ask a really great question, “Why is there no gravity in space?” I bet you’ve seen pictures of the astronauts up in the space station and they’re floating around as if there’s no gravity at all. This is actually a really interesting misconception about what’s going on with the astronauts. And it gets to one of my favorite questions in all of astronomy, and that is: what is an orbit? What’s happening when astronauts are orbiting the Earth? And why does it appear like there’s no gravity in space? So, to talk about why this is kind of a misconception, the astronauts are about 200 miles above the surface of the Earth in the space station; the space station orbits around us about once every 90 minutes. It’s not that they’re so far away from the Earth that there’s no gravity—in fact, if you built a skyscraper that was 200 miles tall and you were up on one of those top floors you might weigh a tiny little bit less, but you probably weigh at least about 80 percent what you normally would. You’re really not that much farther away from the Earth. So it’s not that they’re weightless because they’re in space and far away from the Earth, they’re actually close enough to the Earth to feel the gravitational pull of the Earth itself. So what’s going on? Why are they floating around? Well, this is what an orbit really is. We have to get spacecraft going very, very fast to put them into orbit. That’s why we put them on rockets. Rockets launch spacecraft and get them going very, very fast, and if you’re in orbit where the space station is, you’re traveling at about 17,000 miles an hour. Now, what happens to those astronauts is that they’re going very, very fast but they’re actually freely falling towards the Earth. The Earth has gravity, and that gravity is pulling them down just the same as what would happen as if you dropped a ball. If you dropped a ball it would fall to the floor. The same thing is happening to the astronauts; they are falling towards the surface of the Earth. But here’s a cool thing: they’re going so fast they keep missing the Earth as they fall. And that’s the definition of an orbit. Now think about it this way: I talked about dropping a ball and the ball just falls straight down; what would happen if I put the ball in a little cannon and shot it out? The ball would start to drop towards the Earth the minute it left the cannon, but the cannon has given it some velocity, and so the ball might go a hundred ya... For the full transcript, check out https://bigthink.com/videos/michelle-...

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