They all got shot by the cops for floating over a docking bay.
You wouldn't "feel" G even on the surface of a planet if you're not touching the surface.
Why don't the trucks that drive in the opposite direction of the station spin float off the road?
If you look closely at ships, you will notice this game doesn't even have pilots sitting in the cockpits yet. It's about time they start adding people to it.
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Why don't the people that walk the opposite way around Earth float off the ground?
Centrifugally induced gravity does not work the same way as planetary gravity.
Imagine you are inside a rotating cylinder (like Rama for all you SF fans) The end caps of the cylinder have a ladder from the centre to the circumference of the cylinder. If you were doing down the ladder you would start of with zero gravity. Every step you took would increase the gravity until it reached max at the inside ’floor’ of the cylinder. Now imagine floating down next to the ladder but not actually touching it. You wouldn’t feel any gravity until you actually hit the floor.
(Just finishing Garden of Rama just now. My 1971 original Rendevous with Rama has a pull-out with something that looks ridiculously like the inside of an Orbis station. Submitted upon request)
The "you wouldn't feel gravity unless you touched it" is clearly unfounded. Our Earth orbits Sol because of gravity. If "spin induced" gravity affected the Earth in any meaningful way, we would be flung off the surface as we're on the outside.
Real gravity is simply to do with mass. EVERY object on Earth (pretty much. Don't try this on K2 anyone...) accelerates in the same way as the mass of the Earth is so, so, so much greater than the mass of the object. In reality, the acceleration is due to the combined masses, but the Earth weighs 6E21 tonnes. The biggest stuff we drop is about 100 tonnes.
Spinny gravity isn't gravity at all, but a car that is moving AT ALL relative to the space station is still accelerating in a straight line, and the wall in front of it curves away "up" from it, so the "gravity" is actually the effect of the road pushing the car up the wall. As it's a circle, the effect is constant and continuous for a constant speed. But the faster the car moves, the more force is involved, so racing would be difficult on pneumatic tyres. *grin*
Centrifugally induced gravity does not work the same way as planetary gravity.
Imagine you are inside a rotating cylinder (like Rama for all you SF fans) The end caps of the cylinder have a ladder from the centre to the circumference of the cylinder. If you were doing down the ladder you would start of with zero gravity. Every step you took would increase the gravity until it reached max at the inside ’floor’ of the cylinder. Now imagine floating down next to the ladder but not actually touching it. You wouldn’t feel any gravity until you actually hit the floor.
Where are the humans?