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4 answers

During the acceleration phase, yes. But after getting at a constant velocity again, no.

THis is the same as feeling the g's in your car when you floor it from 0 to 70 mph. You don't feel too much at 0 or 70, just during the hard acceleration in between.

2006-10-07 08:42:08 · answer #1 · answered by captn_carrot 5 · 0 0

In a constant state of motion there is no force experienced by the object inside a plane. So along as the velocity is "static" , the passengers will not feel any difference.

But during acceleration phase the passengers will feel the force of acceleration working on them.

Assuming, other external factors like turbulence, pressure etc are not considered for this case

2006-10-07 09:23:32 · answer #2 · answered by GeekDude 2 · 0 0

If there is a sudden change in the speed from 500mph to 2500mph you will definitely feel the difference,but if the speed increases slowly you will not feel the difference.

2006-10-08 05:41:01 · answer #3 · answered by sam 1 · 0 0

during acceleration, yes. theoretically - after that no. However, at 2500 mph there will probably be more turbulance and such.

2006-10-07 08:44:04 · answer #4 · answered by ss 2 · 0 0

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