I have actually jumped while playing to see if taking myself off the earth completely would break the ground. Now, I understand why the theremin kept right on playing. My body really is the ground.
Here's another mystery that was answered recently. The space station makes electricity with solar panels, and stores the power in batteries. Equipment on the station needs a ground in order to work. If the station is in orbit, how is a ground established when it's haulin' tail around the earth at 17,000 miles an hour, and 200 miles up?
The answer is, they ground to the solar plasma which fills the entire solar system.
So, I'm guessing a theremin should work on an orbiting space station, airplane, or just about anywhere.
Here's another mystery that was answered recently. The space station makes electricity with solar panels, and stores the power in batteries. Equipment on the station needs a ground in order to work. If the station is in orbit, how is a ground established when it's haulin' tail around the earth at 17,000 miles an hour, and 200 miles up?
The answer is, they ground to the solar plasma which fills the entire solar system.
So, I'm guessing a theremin should work on an orbiting space station, airplane, or just about anywhere.