![]() “If you’re traveling at exactly 700 mph, you can drink a Coke, you can do anything you like,” said NASA Ames research psychologist Lee Stone, who isn’t involved with any hyperloop team. But once a plane reaches its constant cruising speed, everyone is basically back to feeling 1 G. Commercial planes submit their passengers to an additional 0.1 to 0.3 Gs during takeoff and landing. If you’re standing on a sidewalk or sitting at a desk right now, then you’re experiencing 1 G. This acceleration is typically expressed as G-force or gravitational force (Technically denoted as “g” but for the sake of easy reading, we’ll use uppercase G). The jet engines let loose, pinning you into your seat, straining your muscles and bones. It’s acceleration - those thrilling moments when your body moves from standstill to near Mach 1 - that produce nausea. “The user experience is not going to be all that different from what they’d feel on a conventional airline.”īut extreme speed isn’t the ticket to Puke City. ![]() “We’re grandma-friendly, dog-friendly and vomit-free,” said Josh Giegel, Hyperloop One senior vice president of engineering. If everything goes according to plan, Hyperloop One’s pods will carry humans and cargo at 760 mph - 30 percent faster than a 747 airplane. First imagined at least 100 years ago, it would basically look like some version of those green tubes on Futurama. THE HYPERLOOP is a totally imaginary transportation device that has captivated entrepreneur Elon Musk, who keeps talking about it. When Elon Musk, founder and CEO of SpaceX and Tesla Motors, proposed the concept in 2013 as a way to travel between San Francisco and Los Angeles in 35 minutes, it was met with dollops of excitement and skepticism. That’s a lot of cheddar, but it raises a basic question: Is hyperloop safe? Hyperloop One, founded by early Uber investor Shervin Pishevar and former SpaceX engineer Brogan BamBrogan, has raised $100 million to connect Los Angeles and Las Vegas with a hyperloop system by 2018. No tube for now, but the company says that a 200-foot-long one is getting assembled for a full-scale test later this year. ![]() This afternoon, a 10-foot-long sled zipped from zero to 60 miles per hour in one second. ![]()
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