If the floor is a magnet, and you are wearing a suit with metall in it (This suit can perhaps also have a layer of something that protects the body against the magnetism, I have heard that it can cause cancer) then you can have gravity, cant you? In order to make sure that the magnetic force is the same from foot to head, the ceiling can be a magnet to, and both can push the metal downwards. Magnetism can be bad for computers and software offcourse, but it can be solved either by keeping the room with the computer magnet and gravity-free, or by insulation the computers with something that blocks the magnetic radiation.
To create gravity this way will require the crew to wear a sort of lightversion of a spacesuit all the way to their target and back - but it might still be better then zero-gravity. Magnetic boots is offcourse a less drastic solution, but it might not help completly against the process of muscle and boneloss, since nothing will drag you down while both feets are on the floor.
Anny reason for why this should not work? They should definitly think about it when going to Mars, or even back to the moon. If you are going to stay on the moon a long time, it might be good to have some extra gravitational pull. Food and non-metal objects will offcourse continue to bounce around in local gravity, but that can have its advantages - as long as the crew doesnt float.
Im planning to write a science fiction book that uses much more low-tech solutions then star-trek, so that why im asking so much, I dont realy have the knowledge needed to start the task - not yet annyway.
To create gravity this way will require the crew to wear a sort of lightversion of a spacesuit all the way to their target and back - but it might still be better then zero-gravity. Magnetic boots is offcourse a less drastic solution, but it might not help completly against the process of muscle and boneloss, since nothing will drag you down while both feets are on the floor.
Anny reason for why this should not work? They should definitly think about it when going to Mars, or even back to the moon. If you are going to stay on the moon a long time, it might be good to have some extra gravitational pull. Food and non-metal objects will offcourse continue to bounce around in local gravity, but that can have its advantages - as long as the crew doesnt float.
Im planning to write a science fiction book that uses much more low-tech solutions then star-trek, so that why im asking so much, I dont realy have the knowledge needed to start the task - not yet annyway.