• Starfighter
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    5 days ago

    No it doesn’t. That’s literally its main distinguishing point.

    Classic physics experiment: Drop a block of steel and a feather in a vacuum. Which hits the ground first? (On earth, with the same fall height, etc)

    Tap for spoiler

    Both impact the ground at the same time

    • nomad@infosec.pub
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      5 days ago

      Are you sure? I thought the experiment is the same mass of feathers and steel.

      • Starfighter
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        5 days ago

        Yes

        Within the same gravitational field, all bodies accelerate in vacuum at the same rate, regardless of the masses or compositions of the bodies; [1]

        Wikipedia: Gravitational Acceleration first paragraph. Follow the [1] citation for a better source than Wikipedia.

        Additionally orbital mechanics would break down. If a dragon spacecraft at the same altitude as the ISS wouldn’t experience the same gravitational acceleration they would have differing orbital periods and thus velocities and could never dock (or perform proximity operations).