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The force of gravity is not the same everywhere on Earth. It is slightly weaker at the equator due to the centrifugal force caused by Earths rotation and the fact that the Earth is not a perfect sphere but an oblate spheroid.
NASA Ames Research Center has developed a novel technology that can help provide solutions to these and other problems by a system and approach for creating artificial gravity using a non-rotating spacecraft with connected moving modules, which can be used for habitation and other purposes.
Parabolic flights create zero gravity environments by using upwards and downward arcs. Each arc creates around 22 seconds of weightlessness, and the maneuver is repeated around 15 times to reproduce a total of 7-8 minutes of weightlessness, similar to that experienced in space.
NASA Glenns Zero Gravity Research Facility houses a 432-foot drop tower, built into the ground, which provides test articles a near-weightless environment for 5.18 seconds, and makes this the worlds largest drop tower of its kind.
Since 1984, ESA and the CNES have flown reduced-gravity missions in a variety of aircraft, including NASAs KC-135, a Caravelle, an Ilyushin Il-76MDK, and an Airbus A300 known as the Zero-G. In 2014 the A300 was phased out in favor of a more modern Airbus A310, also named Zero-G.
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Microgravity, which is the condition of relative near weightlessness, can only be achieved on Earth by putting an object in a state of free fall. NASA conducts microgravity experiments on earth using drops towers and aircraft flying parabolic trajectories.
NASA can create a weightless environment by flying a plane in parabolic paths. The table shows heights h (in feet) of a plane t seconds after starting the flight path. After about 20.8 seconds, passengers begin to experience a weightless environment.
Parabolic flights help with replicating zero-gravity conditions on Earth by providing up to 40 seconds of freefall. The origins of parabolic flight. By 1959, pilots were able to achieve 10 to 15 seconds of freefall in a C-131B cargo transport, which was large enough to both train astronauts and test equipment.

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