Incorrect. As you should be aware simply from looking around you.
Assuming, of course, that you didn't write that immediately after jumping out of a window. In which case you will have by now hit the ground and probably won't be responding for a while. On the way there, though, you would have noticed movement, although whether you would have ascribed that movement to yourself or your surroundings isn't evident, and you would indeed have been accelerating at 32 feet per second per second. Nothing around you would be, though, which is why reaching the ground is so... awkward.
Should you choose to expire in a more static fashion, we can stick your neck in a noose, haul you to the yardarm and pay off the line around the nearest belaying pin. You would be very much in the way should we need to trim the sails, but I can assure you that no power will be needed to keep you up there. Interestingly, should we pay the line through an electric winch, and try to use the motor to hold you up, the power needed, for the short time it took for the motor to reduce itself to slag, would actually be a very large multiple [20-50x] of the power used to get you up there in the first place. But that is due to the characteristics of an electric motor with a locked rotor,
not because we need any power to keep you dangling.
Which brings us around to levitation spells again. Any magical power - whatever that means - consumed in the steady state is going to be dissipated in the internal workings of the spell, because no work is being done on the load. And, judging by the physical power that wasn't needed to raise the load in the first place, that amount isn't all that closely related to the size of the load.
PeterZ wrote:There is movement. An object in Earth's gravity well accelerates at 32 feet/sec/sec. An object at rest will begin to accelerate towards the Earth's center unless another force acts on it. To levitate at sea level, sufficient force to accelerate the object at 32 feet/sec/sec away from Earth's center of mass is required. This assumes nothing else supports the object. Work can be calculated as the force necessary to accelerate an object 32 feet/sec/sec by the distance the object will travel at that acceleration for the length of time the object is made to levitate. Because baring any force to counter gravity, an object will accelerate towards the Earth's center of mass.
Temporarily changing the local gravity might take a lot or a very little arcane energy. Only RFC knows.
bkwormlisa wrote:I agree that holding up something against gravity (or negating gravity for a given mass, or whatever) should be very power intensive, in the sense that it should drain the spell accumulator quickly. And they can only hold up a dragon for a short period of time, which is highly suggestive.
However, what Louis R actually said is that no power is expended while holding something still. In physics, the definition of power is work per time, and the definition of work is that of a force times a displacement - there must be movement, or no work is done. So technically, to a physicist, holding something hovering in midair does no work and therefore takes no power. (I tried to calculate how much energy it takes to hold something up with telekinesis once, and there's no easy answer.) So Louis's statement that is takes no power is true, from a certain point of view (depending on the specific definition of power). My guess is that that's what he meant.
I'm surprised that they do hover sliders, really. Shaylar told us they have to keep the cars light due to the levitation, so why don't they have tracks and just use magic for propulsion? Granted, it would be more limited and take more time to set up, plus you'd have to build a slider track each way instead of only one (two sliders meeting head-on just slide around each other and keep going, as it is), but surely it would still be more efficient, especially for cargo and heavy transport. I wonder if they just never thought of it and will now that they've seen a railroad? Or is it a limitation because of the amount of steel it would take, or the labor required?