- Oct 14, 2005
- 10,051
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I was reading this article:
http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2099830,00.html?hpt=hp_t3
And it made me think....
Let's say the space elevator went 200 kilometers into the sky (double the height of which NASA considers you "in space"). If it was attached to the earth, therefore rotating directly related to the amount the earth was spinning, how fast would the top of the elevator (200 kilometers up) be moving through space? Would it be faster than the 17,000 miles per hour someone would need to maintain orbit? In other words, if they hopped out of the space elevator at 200 kilometers, would they immediately begin falling back to earth because they weren't moving faster than 17,000 mph?
http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2099830,00.html?hpt=hp_t3
And it made me think....
Let's say the space elevator went 200 kilometers into the sky (double the height of which NASA considers you "in space"). If it was attached to the earth, therefore rotating directly related to the amount the earth was spinning, how fast would the top of the elevator (200 kilometers up) be moving through space? Would it be faster than the 17,000 miles per hour someone would need to maintain orbit? In other words, if they hopped out of the space elevator at 200 kilometers, would they immediately begin falling back to earth because they weren't moving faster than 17,000 mph?
