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"As the rate of technological development speeds up, the gap between science fiction and what we’re living now is getting narrower all the time."
- Richard Morgan

Ship's Artificial Gravity  
  A very early mention of the term.  

The phrase "artificial gravity" was first used in science fiction stories just this year, so I can't tell whether or not Nowlan and Calkin originated this term on their own.


(Buck Rogers: Artificial Gravity mention)

Technovelgy from Buck Rogers, 2430 AD, by Philip Nowlan (w/D. Calkins).
Published by Not Known in 1929
Additional resources -

This basic problem of space travel was recognized as early as the 17th century; see the entry for weightlessness in space from The Man in the Moone (1638), by Francis Godwin.

See the entry for city of space from this same work for a more detailed discussion about artificial gravity.

For the first use of the idea see artificial gravity from Brigands of the Moon (1930) by Ray Cummings. Published the same year was the artificial gravity system from Last and First Men (1930) by Olaf Stapledon. See also paragravity from Collision Orbit (1941) by Jack Williamson.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from Buck Rogers, 2430 AD
  More Ideas and Technology by Philip Nowlan (w/D. Calkins)
  Tech news articles related to Buck Rogers, 2430 AD
  Tech news articles related to works by Philip Nowlan (w/D. Calkins)

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