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optimal speed at higher or lower gravity?
Didn't Allan Shepherd hit a golf ball on the Moon? That probably went pretty far, pretty fast!
1g... That's the environment we've evolved in.
This comes back to the transit van in snow question, you need a certain ammount of gravity to initialise friction, a bumble bee cannot run very fast at all due to its air buoyancy, cheetahs have non retractable claws unique I think among cats to overcome the lack of traction at high speeds.
Straight off the bat you would have thought it was something close to 1g.
My guess (like others) is that we are probably pretty close to optimal for 1G.
Kangaroos also evolved in 1g, but jumping does seem to be more efficient in low g.
The 1000m speed skating record is roughly twice as fast as the 1000m running record.
The majority seem to think a slightly higher g environment would help. At least that's their opinion for a 100m sprint where acceleration is everything.
I did think about why bikes are faster than skating. Biking seems almost 100% efficient, almost all the mechanical energy going into forward thrust, whereas the skater is thrusting against his own inertia, sending his center of gravity from side to side. That's a lot of work, even though half of it is negative work being done. The human body doesn't capture negative work very well. Again, a kangaroo does. They're designed to absorb the energy of coming down and bounce back up again, using energy only to add to it a bit. Hence the skater wasting a lot of energy that the cyclist doesn't
Thank you for all your replies. There are no hard rules, but obviously vehicles (powered cars and such) are pointless to ponder.There seems to be categories of responses:Traction:PetroC and Alan mentioned actively gripping the surface if static friction isn't enough. Cleats/claws helps greatly with acceleration. Do they help with speed? At low enough gravity, they have to, else any effort expended 'running' is going to put you in the air most of the time. Limited time in contact with the ground requires maximum thrust while you're down there, so they very much help with speed and not just acceleration, which is what they're used for at 1g.
I've had a quick glance at whats on the web. A similar question has been asked on Quora and Reddit.https://www.quora.com/Is-it-possible-to-run-very-fast-in-a-low-gravity-environmenthttps://www.reddit.com/r/askscience/comments/j4ss3/which_would_be_the_ideal_amount_of_gravity_to_run/
You'd need to modify the atmosphere of your g--altered planet.
Bikes have gears which would account for the faster speed
Quote from: alancalverd on 01/04/2022 15:23:20You'd need to modify the atmosphere of your g--altered planet.Yea, like that. Read the OP Alan. The atmosphere is normal, by whatever means necessary.
from: alancalverd on 01/04/2022 15:23:20You'd need to modify the atmosphere of your g--altered planet.
So given flat ground,
Quote from: Halc on 30/03/2022 16:23:37So given flat ground, ......in a rotating space station of infinite diameter....... Of course. Silly me.
(large enough that it's locally pretty flat)
The human body doesn't capture negative work very well. Again, a kangaroo does.
Special skates going off the sides of the feet..
Both kinds of skates