| micro-g | Microgravity |
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| microgravity |
Weightlessness is the experience (by people and objects) during freefall, of having no apparent weight. This condition is also known as microgravity (see below). Weightlessness in common spacecrafts is not due to an increased distance to the earth; the acceleration due to gravity at an altitude of, say, 100 km is only 3% less than at the surface of the earth. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microgravity
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| microgravity |
A state where the gravity is reduced to almost negligible levels, specifically, below 1 one-millionth of Earth gravity.
Ãâó: paperairplane.mit.edu/16.423J/Space/SBE/neurovesti...
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| microgravity |
Very weak gravity, as in the weightlessness occurring in orbiting spacecraft
Ãâó: www.project-aware.org/Health/Osteo/osteo-gloss.sht...
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| microgravity |
Microgravity is a term commonly applied to a condition of free-fall within a gravitational field in which the weight of an object is reduced compared to its weight at rest on Earth.
Ãâó: science.nasa.gov/newhome/help/glossary.htm
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| microgravity |
when the effects of gravity are very small, like when an object is in
Ãâó: www.nasaexplores.com/show_58_glossary.php
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