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Q&A

Comments on How Could Golf Change in a Low-Gravity Environment?

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How Could Golf Change in a Low-Gravity Environment?

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Low gravity golf was invented by Alan Shepard in 1971 when he hit two golf balls 40 yards on the moon.

Surprisingly, this version of the sport with little atmosphere and much lower gravity, is the most common that will be played on the planets in the solar system that are already top candidates for human settlement.

  • 0.4 g : Mars
  • 0.2 g : The Moon, Triton
  • 0.1 g : Callisto, Ganymede, Eris, Makemake, Pluto
  • 0.02 g : Haumea, Ceres

Shepard's disappointing drive has more to do with the lack of a comfortable suit.

Other than longer drives, how could the sport of golf change in the future, as the sport spreads across the solar system?

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1 comment thread

The surface of Earth's moon is not a microgravity environment (2 comments)
The surface of Earth's moon is not a microgravity environment
Canina‭ wrote over 1 year ago

Technically, I'm pretty sure that on the surface of Earth's moon is not a microgravity environment. By any reasonable human-centric definition it's certainly a low-gravity environment, however. 0.02 g might be borderline. Are you actually primarily interested in microgravity environments (as the question text suggests) or are you interested in low-gravity environments (as stated in the question title)?

James McLellan‭ wrote over 1 year ago

Both. But this question is for low gravity. I'll fix the text. Thank you!