By travelling at the same 360km/hr (with afoermentioned materials that can handle the acid).
Fair enough, as long there's not a bit of turbulence.
Right now, I think the best guess is that its a laminar flow. This needs to be studied.
/goes off to cancel imminent launch of Venus Colony fleet, mumbling about inconvenient schedule disruptions... not to count that the ground beneath my feet is actually solid.
And if you were flying in a hurricane, the ground would be pretty dangerous to encounter.
But I'm am not flying. Those habitats will, perhaps not into the ground (unless an structural failure), but into each other eventually.[/quote]How? If they are drifting on the breeze, the closer they
happen to get, the more similar the breeze in every respect. At worst, they'd drift together at low velocity, relative to each other, and station-keeping propulsion can deal with that.
Where the winds from the west hit winds from the east. (Hint: discovering what updraughts and downdraughts there are is a key investigation by the first unmanned balloon-probes looking at viability, as well as just themselves trying to survive whilst studying their other ground-based objectives.
Knowing where it is won't prevent free floating objects from getting there (and eventually crashing into each other).
Its highly unlikely it
is there. This is what we'd survey for, though. (Winds don't just 'hit each other' and pass through, colliding their payloads like two contra-orbitting satellite objects, frexample, there'd need to be identifiable discontinuities...
Which is an awful amount of "ifs" for what would be one of the most important projects of mankind. There's nothing ensuring they won't at least bump into each other even when traveling in the same direction.
For the first part, that's what we'll ascertain before we do anything serious. For the second part, I've covered that.
... The ground settlers will be dead, melted to the bones, while the air settlers would be screaming in panic as they crash into each other habitats and soon to be joining the ground ones in the afterlife. Fixating on the frame of reference of motion won't change that.
Ever heard of hypotheticals? And we may be able to deal with tne former, we've as yet no reason to believe the latter will happen, but we're darn certain going to find out before we go there for real...
/mumbles about cost over-runs and delays and the parking fees currently being incurred at the space-port...