yes
tenzin jordan
The mass of an astronaut does not change when she is visiting the International Space Station. Mass is a property that does not change, but the weight of a person does change in space.
The first person to live aboard the International Space Station was American astronaut William Shepherd. He and his crewmates, Russian cosmonauts Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Krikalev, arrived at the ISS on November 2, 2000.
No single person designs a space station, or any large and complex machine nowadays. A NASA space station would be designed by a team commissioned by NASA. The ISS is an international undertaking.
Working on the International Space Station can have psychological effects due to factors such as isolation, confinement, and separation from loved ones. Astronauts may experience feelings of loneliness, stress, and altered sleep patterns. However, training and support systems are in place to mitigate these potential psychological impacts.
It may very well be a coaster that a person sets their cups or glasses upon, with a cartoon graphic theme.
It is not age, but how tall a person is.
G means effective gravity caused by the velocity (acceleration and direction of travel) induced upon a body. In the case of a roller coaster the person is the body. 1 G is the effects of gravity regularly. If a roller coaster pulls 2 G this means the effect of gravity is twice the normal and therefore will react by causing the body to be weigh more (weight = mass x gravity)
The person in charge of a railroad station is called a station master.;) Adios from, ME!!
4.2 G's
Many astronauts, cosmonauts, and specialists have lived and worked quitesuccessfully for months at a time on the International Space Station, invirtually zero gravity.
that would depend on the weight of every person, and the weight of the roller coaster..and also the speed at which they are traveling