Does human body capacitance change when floating vs. standing?

AI Thread Summary
Human body capacitance is approximately 100 picofarads, but its variation when floating versus standing is under discussion. The goal is to use a capacitance sensor to detect whether a person is standing on the ground or floating. It is suggested that suspending a person from an insulating string could serve as a practical method for experimentation. Additionally, jumping may provide sufficient data without needing to achieve true floating. Different surfaces, like wet grass versus dry wood, are expected to yield varying capacitance measurements.
mascail
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Hello guys,

I read some articles recently about how touchscreens work by using the capacitance in human bodies. I'v seen the human body capacitance is quoted at around 100pf, is it the same when the human body is floating in mid-air, as if it is standing on the ground? My goal is to detect through a capacitance sensor, (?which detects slight changes of capacitance in the body, when the body is not standing on the ground anymore?) or something like that, if a body is standing on the ground or floating mid-air.
 
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Please teach me how to float in mid-air.
 
GabDX said:
Please teach me how to float in mid-air.

For this particular problem, it would suffice to suspend the human from a long insulating string.
 
NASA has programs where schools design small experiments for astronauts on ISS to try out. This might be a good one if you could think of a way to quantify response of a touchscreen. Certainly seems like good information to have.

NASA National Lab
 
The human probably doesn't really need to float in mid-air. I think it would be enough if the measurements would be taken when he jumps.
 
I guess standing barefoot on a wet grass and standing on a dry wooden floor would give completely different results.
 
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