This question is old news. It's time to update the question. Let's say there's a treadmill mounted on an airplane. If the airplane is flying at 1 mph slower than the speed of sound, but you are running on the treadmill at a speed of 6 mph, will your body be harmed when it breaks the sound barrier?
@Audi driver, P.E., have you considered Dleg's new question? I think it's invalid and Dleg is not providing enough info to Wolverine. What do you think?flight involves... nay... REQUIRES air movement to provide lift.
I had not considered it. But obviously there is information missing. Is the treadmill moving at 6mph? If not, then you're already beyond the speed of sound and obviously you survived. But the bigger question is why would I be running on a treadmill on an airplane. Am I sufficiently drunk?@Audi driver, P.E., have you considered Dleg's new question? I think it's invalid and Dleg is not providing enough info to Wolverine. What do you think?
The treadmill is accelerating from zero to 6 mph, with the person matching that with his /her running speed. So, the person and treadmill are traveling at 1 mph less than the speed of sound at the start of the scenario.Not yet. Is the white plane going 1mph slower than the speed of sound with a person on a treadmill on top accelerating or decelerating?
And is there any sort of power connection between the treadmill and the airplane, either absorbing power to run the treadmill motor or producing power from the motion of the running?
This is critical for my calculations.
Most airplanes use 115 VAC at 400 Hz. If you use a treadmill designed for 115 VAC at 60 Hz, it's going to run ~7 times faster than it would in the US. So now your 5 mph treadmill is going ~33 mph.The treadmill is plugged in to a 120V AC outlet powered by the aircraft's electrical power system.
Because the other color plane didn't want to work.Why's the plane gotta be white?