Floating in zero gravity… on Earth? 🌍 How is that possible?

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Air Zero G’s parabolic flights create a weightless environment by flying along a curved path called a parabola. This short period of weightlessness lasts about 22 seconds, during which people and experiments on board the parabolic flight can experience the same weightlessness as astronauts in orbit on the International Space Station.

The price to pay for this free-floating freedom is two short periods of hypergravity, during which everything weighs almost double for 20 seconds: first when the aircraft pulls up sharply and then again when it pulls out sharply afterwards to return to a normal flight path.

Each parabola takes about one minute to complete and is repeated 31 times in one flight, providing a total of about ten minutes of zero-gravity.

The flights provide European scientists with access to a repeatable, low-gravity research environment. Hundreds of experiments have flown over thousands of parabolas, enabling extensive scientific endeavours across many disciplines and resulting in a huge legacy of publications.

📹 ESA – European Space Agency

📸 ESA/Novespace

#ESA #ZeroG #ParabolicFlight

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11 Comments

  1. You actually experience zero G as soon as the plane stops accelerating upwards. It continues to ascend and then noses over and starts to dive. The pilots have to fly the plane around the zero G trajectory, trying to keep that 'line' in the middle of the fuselage. It's an amazing experience!

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