Brage Eidsvik
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Is swimming affected by gravity? How will swimming in micro gravity compare to high gravity and low gravity.
The discussion explores how gravity affects swimming, particularly in varying gravitational environments such as microgravity, half gravity, and double gravity. Participants examine the implications for buoyancy, water behavior, and breathing challenges in these conditions.
Participants express multiple competing views on the effects of gravity on swimming, particularly regarding the behavior of water in microgravity and the implications for buoyancy and breathing in different gravitational scenarios. The discussion remains unresolved with no consensus reached.
Participants highlight limitations in their assumptions about water behavior, buoyancy, and the compressibility of the human body, as well as the dependence on definitions of pressure and gravity in their arguments.
phinds said:Swimming in micro gravity seems a sure way to drown. Do you see why?
No, because water goes EVERYWHERE in micro gravity and only very slowly settles back. That means if you were in a swimming pool in microgravity you would soon be "swimming" in a solid mass of combined air/water droplets and could not avoid breathing enough water to kill you.Brage Eidsvik said:Because water stick to surfaces making it very hard to escape the water surrounding you? Like the Canadian astronaut pouring water on his eyes to simulate crying in space.
phinds said:No, because water goes EVERYWHERE in micro gravity and only very slowly settles back. That means if you were in a swimming pool in microgravity you would soon be "swimming" in a solid mass of combined air/water droplets and could not avoid breathing enough water to kill you.
Actually you are (or at least I am). Even after a full exhalation, there's a fair amount of air in the lungs and that air is just as wonderfully compressible as any other gas. The volume of the chest depends on the pressure of the air inside at least as much as the mechanical rigidity of the rib cage (which isn't very rigid at all, or we couldn't breath).Thus, as pressure increases the human body loses volume much more quickly than an equivalent volume of liquid. Two observations:Khashishi said:You aren't really more compressible...
Khashishi said:You aren't really more compressible. At higher pressures, you simply take more air into your lungs to fill the same volume. Now, this can potentially cause problems with oxygen poisoning if the atmospheric ratios aren't right, so you probably want an atmosphere with lower oxygen percentage at higher pressures. Higher gravity doesn't necessarily mean higher pressure-- it depends on the thickness of the atmosphere. Divers can experience much higher pressures without lung collapse.