The Sword and Laser discussion

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Leviathan Wakes
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LW: Spinning asteroids/dwarf planets to create gravity
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Plus I'd proably get a crick in my neck


Centrifugal force will simulate gravity, but on smaller bodies such as asteroids or spacecraft/space stations a high spin rate would be required for this simulation. At higher spin rates you would notice the Coriolis effect which might feel like a force pushing you around (although probably towards the floor in a different part of the room rather than directly at a wall).
Well they always talk of the belt as being around a third to half the gravitational force of earth. So.... Wouldnt it be centrifugal? Idk what kind of spin rates we're talking but its nothing like the death star.

So you would feel like you're experiencing gravity, but you'd also feel a sideways force away from the direction of spin, hence Cattfish's comment.
You would think that Ceres is large enough that this effect would be negligible, but Eros is another thing entirely.
This is even referenced in the book in Chapter 2:
"Havelock led the way to their cart, bouncing too high with every step. He didn’t come up to the low gravity levels very often, and it made him awkward. Miller had lived on Ceres his whole life, and truth to tell, the Coriolis effect up this high could make him a little unsteady sometimes too."
and also in Chapter 28:
"As the new guy on the contract, he’d gotten the shit jobs: patrolling levels so high the Coriolis made him seasick"
and in Chapter 38 Miller notices the difference between the two asteroids:
"The air recyclers were eerily quiet, and even though the spin gravity was nearly the same as Ceres’, the Coriolis felt subtly wrong."
* The smaller the object, the higher the spin rate required to generate noticeable centrifugal force.

So you would feel like you're experiencing..."
Having a bit of trouble wrapping my mind around the Coriolis effect. I understand the feeling of gravity because of the spinning. Would the Coriolis be the feeling of the floor moving one way and your head staying in the same place?

(Will Blue Remembered Earth change my mind again? Only time will tell...)



This is actually a myth, the Coriolis effect doesn't make the tub water rotate. I mean if it did effect your bath tub it would probably affect your inner ear as well. The effect is just that as a wind gust or a cannonball goes north or south then the speed of the earths rotation varies, but it still has some of the acceleration from where it started. You can see why it'd be a problem on a small spinning rock going up and down the elevator, since your the speed of rotation would vary as you traveled.
(Though I wonder if someone who grew up on Ceres wouldn't notice the effect, since it seems like the brain might adapt to ignore the issue since it would be so common)
However the earth's rotation on the north and south side of the bath tub drain doesn't vary much. :D

- When walking under this sort of "gravity" you're actually upside down compared to walking on a planet.
- When the characters are talking about going "up" levels they're actually talking about going closer to the centre of the asteroids.
- If you went out on the surface untethered you would be flung off into space, but you'd still slowly fall back to Ceres for a hell of a gravel rash (3 m/s fling force doesn't come close to the escape velocity of 510 m/s). I guess that would continue to happen for a while.
- Speaking of gravel rash ... Imagine what would be happening with any loose rock or regolith on the surface.
- Landing a ship would be difficult process to say the least.

Just looked it up for Earth, it's 1670 kilometers/hour. That's why it's better to locate your launchpad closer to the equator, you get that extra boost.




I know this is nothing too out there and while watching 2001 you notice this when you watch Frank Poole runs around the "Discovery One". While it makes sense it feels counter intuitive when speaking of rocks which subconsciously you'd think of having a normal gravity of some kind given enough mass and not needing a centrifugal force to create gravity.
The reasoning behind this makes sense but mentally it would take getting used to if you were actually there.
The Physics of Science Fiction: Artificial Gravity and Centrifugal
http://youtu.be/WdECeGRXIxQ