Hellbound
Merchant of Doom
Hmmm.
When running, you would actually have a less than constant speed.
You're only actually accelerating during the phase in which your foot is in contact with the ground. In between the contact phases, you're actually slowing down as air resistence slows you. Even in vacuum, the "in-between" stages are free of acceleration, although you might not lose speed.
Now, as someone point out, running is not free of "up-down" motion. So, when trying to run in lower gravity, each "bound" is going to be longer, as your push-off will take you higher and further. This, in turn, limits the amount of foot-ground contact time overall, thus limiting the amount of time you have to actively accelerate in a horizontal direction. This is why, for the astronauts, it was faster to "hop" on the moon than try to walk or run. But even this hop was slower than a full-out sprint under 1G.
You'd be slower in low gravity.
Least that's my argument.
When running, you would actually have a less than constant speed.
You're only actually accelerating during the phase in which your foot is in contact with the ground. In between the contact phases, you're actually slowing down as air resistence slows you. Even in vacuum, the "in-between" stages are free of acceleration, although you might not lose speed.
Now, as someone point out, running is not free of "up-down" motion. So, when trying to run in lower gravity, each "bound" is going to be longer, as your push-off will take you higher and further. This, in turn, limits the amount of foot-ground contact time overall, thus limiting the amount of time you have to actively accelerate in a horizontal direction. This is why, for the astronauts, it was faster to "hop" on the moon than try to walk or run. But even this hop was slower than a full-out sprint under 1G.
You'd be slower in low gravity.
Least that's my argument.