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Ricky Lai (x-lai@uchicago.edu)
Tue, 07 Nov 2000 02:12:29 -0600


Given that gravity is simulated inside a space colony, would a totally detached
object (i.e. not touching the colony at all, and therefore not sharing the same
spinning motion) within a colony still experience the gravitational force
brought about by the colony's longitudinal revolution?

KurenaiJiku wrote:

> F91 can fly in space or on Earth. Since space colonies simulate Earth
> gravity, and it flew on a colony and in space in the movie; yes it can.
> V-Gundam I'm pretty sure as it has the core block system, and like the
> RX-78, it can fly in space or on Earth without much configuration. But
> then again, the GP01fb and GP01 are both core block systems, with the fb
> being the space version and the without being the Earth version. I'm sure
> any mobile suit can fly in any environment if it has verniers, it's just
> that the main concern (as displayed in 0083), that the MS balancer needs to
> be configured for space or Earth. It'd be weird to have a horizon line on
> your gauge when in space, there really is no horizon. :)

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