Free falling in outer space Matt J. Carlson

Have you ever been floating
in a swimming pool,

all comfy and warm, thinking,

“Man, it’d be cool to be an astronaut!

You could float out in outer space,
look down at the Earth and everything.

It’d be so neat!”

Only that’s not how it is at all.

If you are in outer space,
you are orbiting the Earth:

it’s called free fall.

You’re actually falling towards the Earth.

Think about this for a moment:
that’s the feeling you get

if you’re going over the top
of a roller coaster, going, like, “Whoa!”

Only you’re doing this

the whole time you’re orbiting the Earth,

for two, three, four hours, days.

Whatever it takes, right?

So, how does orbiting work?

Let’s take a page from Isaac Newton.

He had this idea,
a little mental experiment:

You take a cannon,

you put it on top of a hill.

If you shoot the cannonball,

it goes a little bit away.

But if you shoot it harder,

it goes far enough so that it lands

a little bit past the curvature of Earth.

Well, you can imagine if you shot
it really, really, hard,

it would go all the way around the Earth

and come back – boom! – and hit you
in the backside or something.

Let’s zoom way back
and put you in a little satellite

over the North Pole of the Earth

and consider north to be up.

You’re going to fall down
and hit the Earth.

But you are actually moving
sideways really fast.

So when you fall down,

you’re going to miss.

You’re going to end up on the side
of the Earth, falling down,

and now the Earth is pulling
you back in sideways.

So it’s pulling you back in
and you fall down,

and so you miss the Earth again,
and now you’re under the Earth.

The Earth is going to pull you up,
but you’re moving sideways still.

So you’re going to miss the Earth again.

Now you’re on the other side
of the Earth, moving upward,

and the Earth’s pulling you sideways.

So you’re going to fall sideways,

but you’re going to be moving up
and so you’ll miss.

Now you’re back on top of the Earth
again, over the North Pole,

going sideways and falling down,

and yep – you guessed it.

You’ll keep missing
because you’re moving so fast.

In this way, astronauts orbit the Earth.

They’re always falling towards the Earth,

but they’re always missing, and therefore,
they’re falling all the time.

They feel like they’re falling,
so you just have to get over it.

So technically, if you ran
fast enough and tripped,

you could miss the Earth.

But there’s a big problem.

First, you have to be going
eight kilometers a second.

That’s 18,000 miles an hour,

just over Mach 23!

The second problem:

If you’re going that fast,

yes, you would orbit the Earth
and come back where you came from,

but there’s a lot of air in the way,

much less people and things.

So you would burn up
due to atmospheric friction.

So, I do not recommend this.

你有没有漂浮
在游泳池里

,舒服又温暖,心想:

“伙计,当宇航员真是太酷了!

你可以漂浮在外太空,
俯视地球和一切。

它会是 好整齐!”

只是根本不是这样。

如果你在外太空,
你就在绕地球运行:

这叫做自由落体。

你实际上正在向地球坠落。

想一想:

如果你越过
过山车的顶部,就会有这种感觉,就像,“哇!”

只有你在

绕地球运行的整个过程中都在这样做,

持续两、三、四个小时、几天。

不管需要什么,对吧?

那么,轨道是如何工作的呢?

让我们看看艾萨克·牛顿的一页。

他有这个想法,
一个小小的心理实验:

你拿一门大炮

,把它放在山顶上。

如果你射击炮弹,

它就会消失一点。

但如果你用力射击,

它会飞得足够远,以至于它会

稍微超过地球的曲率。

好吧,你可以想象,如果你
真的、真的、用力地射击它,

它会绕地球一圈

然后回来——轰! ——然后在你背后打你
什么的。

让我们放大回去
,把你放在

地球北极上空的一颗小卫星上,

并认为北方是向上的。

你会掉下
来撞到地球。

但你实际上正在
快速横向移动。

所以当你跌倒时,

你会错过。

你最终会站在
地球的一边,掉下来

,现在地球正把
你拉回一边。

所以它把你拉回来
,你摔倒了

,所以你又想念地球了
,现在你在地球下面。

地球会把你拉起来,
但你仍然在侧向移动。

所以你会再次想念地球。

现在你在地球的另
一边,向上移动

,地球把你拉到一边。

所以你会横向跌倒,

但你会向上移动
,所以你会错过。

现在你又回到了地球顶部
,越过北极

,侧身掉下来,

是的——你猜对了。

你会一直失踪,
因为你移动得太快了。

通过这种方式,宇航员绕地球运行。

它们总是向地球坠落,

但它们总是失踪,因此,
它们一直在坠落。

他们觉得他们正在跌倒,
所以你只需要克服它。

所以从技术上讲,如果你跑得
足够快并绊倒了,

你可能会错过地球。

但是有一个大问题。

首先,你必须以
每秒八公里的速度行驶。

那是每小时 18,000 英里,

刚刚超过 23 马赫!

第二个问题:

如果你跑得那么快,

是的,你会绕地球运行,
然后回到你原来的地方,

但是路上有很多空气,

更不用说人和事了。

所以你会
因为大气摩擦而燃烧。

所以,我不推荐这个。