no can not cry any person in zero gravity.........
There is no "zero gravity" place. Gravity permeates all the universe. Astronauts in orbit are often said to be in zero gravity but they are, in reality, on a position where their orbital velocity balances the attraction of the Earth.
Many astronauts, cosmonauts, and specialists have lived and worked quitesuccessfully for months at a time on the International Space Station, invirtually zero gravity.
Any time a person falls, they experience reduced gravity for a short time. If they fall a greater distance, the more likely they will experience something close to zero G. Sky diving, riding a roller coaster/ amusement park ride with a free fall component can get close to zero g. If you've been in a plane that hit turbulence and dropped quite a ways, you may have experienced zero gravity. Point is, zero is experienced during free fall, which is exactly what the astronauts are doing when they are in orbit.
Walmart, Amazon, and the Oveerstock website all sell zero gravity chairs. There are many different types of "zero gravity chairs" so be careful which one you are ordering.
No.
My guess is that it's not an uncommon occurrence.
weight of the person in space is zero because there is no gravity
Zero! that's why it is called zero gravity!
zero gravity
Depends on the atmosphere. location, place, space and time of zero gravity
Because there is almost no gravity in space. When a person is in orbit just outside of earth, the outward acceleration will cancel out the force of gravity, giving a person zero weight.
In the case of a parachute, the person and parachute fall at a constant speed once the forces acting on them are balanced. This means that the net acceleration, including gravity, is zero. Gravity is still acting on the person and parachute, but it is balanced by the drag force exerted by the parachute, resulting in a constant speed descent.
Yes; the gravity from different sides should cancel, for a net result of zero gravity.
Yes, satellite orbiting the Earth in a Geo-Stationary Orbit has 0 Velocity relative to a point on the Earth, BUT it experience the 'Pull' (acceleration) of Gravity, which prevents it from escaping its Orbit. The Gravity is LESS than that at the surface of the Earth, but not 0. The feeling of WEIGHTLESSNESS is not due to Zero Gravity, but due to the fact that Object is FALLING through its Orbit. A Person Falling "feels" Zero Gravity.
No. Gravity is a force with unlimited reach. Gravitys grip-force decreases with an increase in the distance between bodies. In a nutshell, there is no zero gravity, but there is very close to zero gravity. In the deep space between and at extreme distances from any galaxies we find what is effectively zero gravity.
There is no "zero gravity" place. Gravity permeates all the universe. Astronauts in orbit are often said to be in zero gravity but they are, in reality, on a position where their orbital velocity balances the attraction of the Earth.
Zero Gravity Research Facility was created in 1966.