Alternatively, if you are constantly x feet above a spot on Earth, where x is the number of seconds since takeoff, we have a different problem. You’d be in a geostationary orbit above that spot, following the Earth as it rotates, no matter how far away you are. After about 10 years, you are traveling at the speed of light, and this only increases. Hope your body don’t impact Proxima Centauri.
Comment on What if you floated upwards 1 ft every second?
ThePantser@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
I thought he would have stopped at space as you are not going “up” anymore.
hitstun@feddit.online 1 day ago
spinning_disk_engineer@lemmy.ca 8 hours ago
Edit: Oops, I assumed an Earth day is 1 second instead of 86,000 seconds
I don’t think that one’s been made for Youtube yet.
hitstun@feddit.online 1 day ago
For me, “down” is the direction that gravity you pulls you, and “up” is the opposite. As you leave Earth’s orbit and orbit the Sun instead, you start moving away from the Sun at 1 foot per second instead, unless doing so would move you back in a planet’s orbit.
CreamyJalapenoSauce@piefed.social 1 day ago
What if you hit some sort of local Lagrange point?
knightly@pawb.social 1 day ago
If all the local sources of graity are balanced out, then you’d probably start moving away from the center of the galaxy.