Rahmuss said:
... you would have to keep adjusting your three contact points...
You wouldn't so much keep
adjusting them as you would
keep them rigid. In theory, if your leg muscles were strong enough, you could plant your feet
a metre apart and still stay upright (skaters and cheerleaders can do this). You would not have to "keep adjusting" anything - likewise, a perfectly solid statue of a man would stand like this just fine with no sliding.
Rahmuss said:
DaveC426913 - So you are saying that every atom in our body would vibrate with the exact same force, no matter what pressure is applied to it and not matter what kind of atom it is? That seems a bit ridiculous doesn't it?
Yes it does. Which is why I never said anything of the sort.
The atoms in your body can do whatever they want - great gooey gobs of them could all leap 2 inches to the left if they want. It will not affect the location of your
centre of mass. And it will not create any
net movement of your centre of mass.
Rahmuss said:
Heck, since they didn't say that there was no air, then even breathing in one direction continuously could start you moving.
Yes, we've already dealt with the breathing thing. Breathing is a propulsive force, and it ejects mass from your body - completely different from internal forces.
Rahmuss said:
Again, it would be very small; but a completely frictionless surface... man you'd keep accelerating until the drag force of the air capped your speed.
No, you would not keep accelerating. As you breathe in and out, you'd move first forward, then back on each breath, resulting in no net movement over time.
What you
could do though, is turn your head between inhalation and exhalation.
Then you would get net movement. (Of course, that would work only in principle. Since your bosdy turns in the opposite direction to your head, you'd have to turn your head well past 180 degrees in one direction to get your "exhaust port" re-pointed along your axis of movement. Either that or you'd have to settle for either a circular path or a s-curved path.)
I am dubious about your top speed though. Seems to me it'll limited by your exhaust velocity (your breath) before it'll be limited by air friction on your body. I think it would cap out when your exhaust velocity (again, your breath) equals the apparent wind. i.e. If you can breathe a column of air moving 4mph, then your velocity would plateau when the surrounding air is moving relative to you at 4mph.