Reduced Gravity - Nasa - nasa 2025

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Many people seem to think NASA has secret training rooms in which gravity can be turned off. Aside from the long-running Anti Gravity column in Scientific American, however, there is no such thing as antigravity. Gravity is a force arising among any two masses in the universe.
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.
NASA also has a specific Zero Gravity Research Facility at Glenn Research Center thats been in operation since 1966. It works by using a 467-foot-long steel vacuum chamber.
They were able to generate a small amount of artificial gravity, about 0.00015 g, by firing their side thrusters to slowly rotate the combined craft like a slow-motion pair of bolas. The resultant force was too small to be felt by either astronaut, but objects were observed moving towards the floor of the capsule.
But even though gravity might get smaller and smaller the further you are from an object, it never goes to zero. As long as there is mass (even your own or that of your instruments) there is gravity. The International Space Station (ISS) orbits about 400 kilometers (250 miles) over the surface of the Earth.
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Many scientists strongly believe that antigravity isnt possible, given what we know about the universe and the laws that govern it.
Gravity, unlike electromagnetism, only has one type of charge: positive mass and/or positive energy. Without some type of negative mass and/or negative energy entity, we cant create a directed gravitational field the way we can direct and control an electric field.
In the 20th century, Newtons model was replaced by general relativity where gravity is not a force but the result of the geometry of spacetime. Under general relativity, anti-gravity is impossible except under contrived circumstances.

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