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So how do rockets fly in space?
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Oliver
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PostTue Mar 09, 2004 9:38 am    So how do rockets fly in space?

Hi,

Can anyone help me on this topic? I know that space is nearly vacuum, which means no air. It's a void. This implies that no sound can travel through space. OK, fair enough.

But! On the Earth's surface, rockets are being pushed forward by the reaction of the motor. Am I right here? The motor exerts an action onto the air and for every action there is an reaction which explanes why the motor is pushed forward.

However, if you take away the air (like in space), then there would be no reaction of the motor's action! So how do rockets accelerate or decelerate in space? Or even change direction?

Any help would be fine thanks!

Oliver


Last edited by Oliver on Tue Mar 09, 2004 1:54 pm; edited 1 time in total


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Gladiator
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PostTue Mar 09, 2004 10:01 am    

"for every action there is a reaction" is something that Newton said. The thing is that no matter where you are this law thing and others apply so they say if you're drifting in space away from your space ship, then you take your a part of your backpack off and throw it in the opposite direction towards where you are going. The ship stays floating because theres no gravity there and for the turns they have little rocket things on the sides.

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EnsignParis
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PostTue Mar 09, 2004 10:11 am    

Just because there is no air in space doesn't mean that rockets don't work. In fact, in space, rockets work better BECAUSE there is no air, and therefore no air resistance.

Rockets in space will accelerate until they reach the speed of the thing that is pushing them; nothing can move faster than what is pushing it.

To negatively accelerate (some people call it decelerate, but negative acceleration is the correct term) rockets use forward thrusters, to counteract the effect of their engines. Since there is virtually no air in space, there is no air resistance, so just turning off the engines won't do much, since there will be no friction (air resistance) slowing the rocket down. The rocket will continue to go the same speed as it was going when the rockets were turned off, so we need a force to push the opposite way the rocket is moving, and one of the ways to do this is to use forward thrusters. I'm sure NASA has other methods of slowing a rocket down, but if you really care, I'm sure you can do some research...because frankly, I just don't feel like doing it .

Hope that helped you understand that a bit more, and if you have any more questions, I'll be more than happy to help you out if I can.


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Oliver
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PostTue Mar 09, 2004 10:11 am    

Right! That's the preservation of motion law or something like that. So you mean to say that rockets accelerate, deccelerate or change direction by ejecting matter (this may be air at a high speed) in to the other direction of motion?

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EnsignParis
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PostTue Mar 09, 2004 10:24 am    

It could be air, but conventional rockets use chemical reactions to produce energy.

Liquid oxygen and hydrogen combust in a controlled environment and this combustion produces energy and this energy is harnessed (in other words, sent out the back of the rocket to propel) to make the rocket move.


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PrankishSmart
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PostTue Mar 09, 2004 5:31 pm    

I think most of the energy to push the rocket into space is during the first couple of minutes. Rockets poduce 160 million horse power!

Anyways, chemical fuel does have all the fuel and oxygen mix in a dry form these days. The thrust is directed behind the rocket, so the rocket moves in the other way.


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imzadi76
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PostThu Mar 11, 2004 8:39 am    

EnsignParis wrote:

To negatively accelerate (some people call it decelerate, but negative acceleration is the correct term) rockets use forward thrusters, to counteract the effect of their engines. Since there is virtually no air in space, there is no air resistance, so just turning off the engines won't do much, since there will be no friction (air resistance) slowing the rocket down. The rocket will continue to go the same speed as it was going when the rockets were turned off, so we need a force to push the opposite way the rocket is moving, and one of the ways to do this is to use forward thrusters. I'm sure NASA has other methods of slowing a rocket down, but if you really care, I'm sure you can do some research...because frankly, I just don't feel like doing it .


Negative acceleration is a big problems with rockets in space because it takes as much fuel to stop it as it does to accelerate it. When we were using rockets for space exploration, like during the Apollo missions, we had to use orbits around Earth and the moon to control the acceleration and deceleration of the rockets. We never actually landed a rocket on the moon, we put a rocket into the moon's orbit and dropped a lander on the surface. The amount of fuel necessary to fly to the moon, decelarate, land, then lift-off from the from the moon's surface would have been so great that it's practically impossible to do. (There would have to be so much fuel that it would be extremely heavy, so heavy that it probably wouldn't be able to break Earth's gravity)

This is one of the exciting possibilities of finding water on a planet like Mars. Using electrolysis, water can be broken down into it's constituant components - Hydrogen for rocket fuel and Oxygen for the explorers. If we find a supply of water on another world it would be possible to use the planet as a refueling station for spacecraft.



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webtaz99
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PostThu Mar 11, 2004 5:50 pm    How Rockets work

To answer your original question:

Rockets burn fuel and oxidizer (sometimes a single substance, but most often a combination) in a combustion chamber. This builds up pressure as the cumbustion products expand. The nozzle lets cumbustion products fly out of the chamber in one direction. This creates an unbalanced force in the opposite direction, pushing the combustion chamber (and the rocket) in the intended direction. The presence or absence of air makes only a slight (less than 10%) difference in thrust.

NASA has developed a rocket engine to get every last bit of efficiency. It's called the linear aeropsike. http://www1.msfc.nasa.gov/NEWSROOM/background/facts/aerospike.html



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Gladiator
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PostFri Mar 12, 2004 12:29 am    

im or Taz as far as I know when a spaceship connects to a base in space it uses thrusters to control side ways as well as forward and back ward movements. But during long flights is the same correct in outer space?

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webtaz99
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PostFri Mar 12, 2004 12:54 pm    

Yes. The shuttles have something like 47 separate rocket engines. Smaller engines used for attitude control are often called "thrusters". But the basic priciple is still the same.


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Dax Orien
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PostTue Mar 23, 2004 8:49 am    

This is kind of a stupid comment/question, but would a propellar do anything in space?


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webtaz99
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PostTue Mar 23, 2004 9:06 pm    Propeller in space

It would spin real fast.


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Dax Orien
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PostWed Mar 24, 2004 10:28 am    

Well that's all good and dandy. So is that all it would do?


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Oliver
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PostWed Mar 24, 2004 12:20 pm    

A propellar works on its air displacement and since there is no air in space, it wouldn't be much help...

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