Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by ceejayoz 829 days ago
Free-fall isn't zero-gravity, and anyone who observes the five-second rule has had a similar experience.
4 comments

But by that argument neither is floating around in the ISS - you're still being accelerated by gravity, you're just in the fortunate position that you have enough velocity not to hit the earth.

If the colloquial term "zero gravity" applies to someone in the ISS, then it also applies to someone in a suddenly dropping aircraft.

Yes it is, didn't Einstein say that gravity and acceleration are indistinguishable
"Zero-g" is different to "zero gravity". https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weightlessness
The whole microgravity thing is pedantic, yes tidal forces exist, but at human scales they are not detectable.
In free-fall, the object is primarily being accelerated by gravity.
Yes but this is indistinguishable from the perspective of the falling object.
If you're wanting to be so perfectionistic, five-second rule experiences is an apples to oranges comparison.
Relatively to the aircraft, the food was zero gravity though?