What if there was a lake on the Moon? What would it be like to swim in it?
Presuming that it is sheltered in a regular atmosphere, in some giant dome or
something.
Kim Holder
This would be so cool.
In fact, I honestly think its cool enough that it gives us a pretty good
reason to go to the Moon in the first place. At the very least, its better
than the one Kennedy gave.
Floating would feel about the same on the Moon as on Earth, since how high
in the water you float depends only on your bodys density compared to the
waters, not the strength of gravity.
Swimming underwater would also feel pretty similar. The inertia of the
water is the main source of drag when swimming, and inertia is a property of
matter[1]♬ BILL NYE THE SCIENCE GUY ♬ independent of gravity. The top
speed of a submerged swimmer would be about the same on the Moon as here—about
2 meters/second.
Everything else would be different and way cooler. The waves would
be bigger, the splash fights more intense, and swimmers would be able to jump
out of the water like dolphins.
This Not this one. The other one.The simplest approach, which gives us an approximate answer, is to
treat the swimmer as a simple projectile. The formula for the height of a
projectile is:
... which tells us that a champion swimmer moving at 2 meters per second (4.5
mph) would only have enough kinetic energy to lift their body about
20 centimeters against gravity.
Thats not totally accurate, although its enough to tell us that dolphin jumps
on Earth probably arent in the cards for us. But to get a more accurate answer
(and an equation we can apply to the Moon), we need to account for a few other
things.
When a swimmer first breaks the surface, they dont have to lift their full
weight; theyre partially supported by buoyancy. As more of their body leaves
the water, the force of buoyancy decreases, since their body is displacing less
water. Since the force of gravity isnt changing, their net weight increases.
You can calculate how much potential energy is required to lift a body
vertically through the surface to a certain height, but its a complicated
integral (you integrate the displacement of the submerged portion of their body
over the vertical distance they travel) and depends on their body shape. For a
human body moving fast enough to jump most of the way out of the water, this
effect probably adds about half a torso-length to their final height—and less
if theyre not able to make it all the way out.
The other effect we have to account for is the fact that a swimmer can continue
kicking as they start to leave the water. When a swimmer is submerged and
moving at top speed, the drag from the water is equal to the thrust they
generate by kicking and ... whatever the gerund form of the verb is for the
things your arms do while swimming. My first thought was "stroking," but
its definitely not that.
Anyway, once the jumping swimmer breaks the surface, the drag almost vanishes,
but they can keep kicking for a few moments. To figure out how much energy this
adds, you can multiply the thrust from kicking by the distance over which
theyre kicking after breaking the surface, since energy equals force times
distance. The distance is most of a body length, or 1 to 1.5 meters. As for the
force from kicking, random Google results for a search for lifeguard
qualifications suggest that good swimmers might be able to carry 10 lbs over
their heads for a short distance, which means theyre generating a little more
than 10 pounds-force (50+ N) of kicking thrust.
We can combine all these together into a big ol equation:
footnote contains
some detail on the math behind a dolphin jump. Calculating the height a swimmer
can jump out of the water requires taking several different things into
account, but the bottom line is that a normal swimmer on the Moon could
probably launch themselves a full meter out of the water, and Michael Phelps
may well be able to manage 2 or 3.
The numbers get even more exciting when we introduce fins.
Swimmers wearing fins
can go substantially faster than regular swimmers
without them (although the fastest swimmer wearing flippers will still lose to
a runner, even if the runner is also wearing flippers and jumping over hurdles).
Champion finswimmers can go almost 3.2 m/s wearing a monofin, which is
fast enough for some pretty impressive jumps—even on Earth. Data on swimfin
top speeds and thrustsThis
paper provides some sample data. suggest that on the Moon, a champion
finswimmer could probably launch themselves as high as 4 or 5 meters into
the air. In other words, on the Moon, you could conceivably do a high dive in
reverse.
But it gets even better. A
2012 paper in PLoS ONE, titled Humans Running in Place on Water at
Simulated Reduced Gravity, concluded that while humans cant run on the
surface of water on Earth,They actually provide a citation for this
statement, which is delightful. they might just barely be able to do so on the
Moon. (I highly recommend reading their paper, if only for the hilarious
experimental setup illustration on page 2.)
Because of the reduced gravity on the Moon, the water would be
launched upward more easily, just like the swimmers. The result would be larger
waves and more flying droplets. In technical terms, a pool on the Moon would be
more "splashy".The SI unit of splashiness is the splashypant.
To avoid splashing all the water out, youd want to design the deck so
water drains quickly back into the pool. You could just make the rim higher,
but then youd spoil one of the key joys of a pool on the Moon—exiting via Slip
N Slide:
I 100% support this idea. If we ever build a Moon base, I think we should
absolutely build a big swimming pool there. Sure, sending a swimming pools
worth of water (135 horses) to the Moons
surface would be expensive.If you decided to bundle a backyard pool into
individual two-liter bottles, and sent them in 3,000 batches of 10 each via the
startup Astrobotic, it would cost you
$72 billion (according to their websites calculator).
But on the other hand, this lunar base is going to have people on it, so you
need to send some water anyway.Sending a supply of water and a filter
system is probably cheaper than sending a replacement astronaut every 3
or 4 days, although I encourage NASA to run the numbers on that to be sure.
And its really not impossible. A large backyard swimming pool weighs
about as much as four Apollo lunar landers. A next-generation(or, heck, previous-generation)
heavy-lift rocket, like Boeings NASA SLS or Elon Musks SpaceX Falcon Heavy,
would be able to deliver a good-sized pool to the Moon in not too many trips.
So maybe the next step, if you really want a swimming pool on the Moon, is
to call Elon Musk and ask for a quote.
http://what-if.xkcd.com/124/