I think the experience of falling slowly down a tube would be very interesting.
I know it would be expensive, but money aside, would it be possible in any form?
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N7tIi71-AjAMaybe
I imagine the experience would be about as interesting as taking an elevator down a tall building. Maybe I am missing something, though?
So, like an elevator?
I agree that Lenz's law is pretty neat. In high school my electronics class got to visit a research MRI and bring in coils of wire and other objects to experience it first-hand.
You couldn't use multiple magnets on the person or they might smash together, and you'd have to be very careful guests stayed apart, and that they didn't have anything magnetic in their pockets to go flying towards the magnet and hurt them.
You could do it with air pressure, like indoor skydiving in a confined area, but it would probably be loud and somewhat unpleasant.
Since people aren't magnetic it would probably feel exactly the same as jumping with a harness on a cable instead of with magnets.
Unless you used the frog levitation thing but that's a different effect and would probably be really expensive
I wonder if you could do this with passive air pressure alone. That way, no strong magnets required and you can use clear building materials so you can see out.
A simple model:
Imagine a hollow cylinder (like a pipe) with one end capped. It is standing vertically, with the capped end down. Now imagine the ride "vehicle" is a plexiglass sphere. If you drop the sphere into the cylinder from above and the plexiglass sphere isn't a perfect fit to the inside diameter of the cylinder, the sphere will fall through the pipe and eventually hit the capped bottom of the pipe. How fast the sphere slows in the pipe will be some function of how much clearance there is between the sphere and the ID of the pipe.
There are elevators that work sorta like this, but with seals and much slower, pneumatic vacuum elevators (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QccXIj0k5qg). At least, they do basically this in one failure mode.
Ok, great. But we want a fun ride. What about, instead of a pipe, a big funnel? Could be straight-walled or shaped like the bell of a trumpet or the barrel of a blunderbuss (i.e., fans out at an increasing rate). Now, since we don't need you exactly in a tight-fitting pipe (at least at the beginning), we can just drop you at the funnel, rather than starting you carefully placed within the pipe. So you get some amount of free-fall inside a clear plastic sphere.
Okay, that's a ride! My gut says that there should be some combination of funnel shape, sphere size, and possibly vents in the side of the funnel that allows us to control the rate of deceleration as you approach the ground such that the human(s) inside the sphere are unharmed and had a lot of fun.
Physics nerds: what say you?
That would be scary, and a cool experience, I think.