ROCKET, in Aeronautics

any vehicle propelled by ejection of the gases produced by combustion of self-contained propellants. Rockets are used in fireworks, as military weapons, and in scientific applications such as space exploration.

Rocket Propulsion

The force acting on a rocket, called its thrust, is equal to the mass ejected per second times the velocity of the expelled gases. This force can be understood in terms of Newton's third law of motion, which states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. In the case of a rocket, the action is the backward-streaming flow of gas and the reaction is the forward motion of the rocket. Another way of understanding rocket propulsion is to realize that tremendous pressure is exerted on the walls of the combustion chamber except where the gas exits at the rear; the resulting unbalanced force on the front interior wall of the chamber pushes the rocket forward. A common misconception, before space exploration pointed up its obvious fallacy, holds that a rocket accelerates by pushing on the atmosphere behind it. Actually, a rocket operates more efficiently in outer space, since there is no atmospheric friction to impede its motion.

Rocket Design

The key elements in designing a rocket are the propulsion system, which includes the propellant and the exit nozzle, and determining the number of stages required to lift the intended payload. Rocket navigation is usually based on inertial guidance; internal gyroscopes are used to detect changes in the position and direction of the rocket.

Rocket Propellants

The most vital component of any rocket is the propellant, which accounts for 90% to 95% of the rocket's total weight. A propellant consists of two elements, a fuel and an oxidant; engines that are based on the action-reaction principle and that use air instead of carrying their own oxidant are properly called jets. Propellants in use today include both liquefied gases, which are more powerful, and solid explosives, which are more reliable; the space shuttle's main engines use liquid propellant, while its boosters are solid-fuel rockets. The chemical energy of the propellants is released in the form of heat in the combustion chamber.

A typical liquid engine uses hydrogen as fuel and oxygen as oxidant; a typical solid propellant is nitroglycerine. In the liquid engine, the fuel and oxidant are stored separately at extremely low temperatures; in the solid engine, the fuel and oxidant are intimately mixed and loaded directly into the combustion chamber. A solid engine requires an ignition system, as does a liquid engine if the propellants do not ignite spontaneously on contact.

The efficiency of a rocket engine is defined as the percentage of the propellant's chemical energy that is converted into kinetic energy of the vehicle. During the first few seconds after liftoff, a rocket is extremely inefficient, for at least two unavoidable reasons: High power consumption is required to overcome the inertia of the nearly motionless mass of the fully fueled rocket; and in the lower atmosphere, power is wasted overcoming air resistance. Once the rocket gains altitude, however, it becomes more efficient. as the trajectory, at first vertical, curves into a suborbital arc or into the desired orbit.

Although all known rockets currently in use derive their energy from chemical reactions, more exotic propulsion systems are being considered. In ion propulsion, a plasma (ionized gas consisting of a mixture of positively charged atoms and negatively charged electrons) would be created by an electric discharge and then expelled by an electric field. The engine could provide a low thrust efficiently for long periods; on a lengthy flight this would produce very high velocities, so that if there is ever a trip to the outer planets an ion drive might be used. Deep Space 1, a space probe launched in 1998 to test new technologies, was propelled intermittently by an ion engine. Even nuclear power has been considered for propulsion; in fact, a nuclear ramjet was developed in the early 1960s before it was realized that because the exhaust gases would be highly radioactive such a drive could never be used in earth's atmosphere.

Design of the Exit Nozzle

A critical element in all rockets is the design of the exit nozzle, which must be shaped to obtain maximum energy from the exhaust gases moving through it. The nozzle usually converges to a narrow throat, then diverges to create a form which shapes the hypersonic flow of exhaust gas most efficiently. The walls of the combustion chamber and nozzle must be cooled to protect them against the heat of the escaping gases, whose temperature may be as high as 3,000 degrees Celsius—above the melting point of any metal or alloy.

Staging of Rockets

Although early rockets had only one stage, it was early recognized that no single-stage rocket can reach orbital velocity (5 mi/8 km per sec) or the earth's escape velocity (7 mi/11 km per sec). Hence multistage rockets, such as the two-stage Atlas-Centaur or the three-stage Saturn V, became necessary for space exploration. In these systems, two or more rockets are assembled in tandem and ignited in turn; once the lower stage's fuel is exhausted, it detaches and falls back to earth. Soviet systems clustered several rockets together, operated simultaneously, to obtain a large initial thrust.

Development of Rockets

The invention of the rocket is generally ascribed to the Chinese, who as early as a.d. 1000 stuffed gunpowder into sections of bamboo tubing to make military weapons of considerable effectiveness. The 13th-century English monk Roger Bacon introduced to Europe an improved form of gunpowder, which enabled rockets to become incendiary projectiles with a relatively long range. Rockets subsequently became a common if unreliable weapon. Major progress in design resulted from the work of William Congreve, an English artillery expert, who built a 20-lb (9-kg) rocket capable of traveling up to 2 mi (3 km). In the late 19th cent., the Austrian physicist Ernst Mach gave serious theoretical consideration to supersonic speeds and predicted the shock wave that causes sonic boom.

The astronautical use of rockets was cogently argued in the beginning of the 20th cent. by the Russian Konstantin E. Tsiolkovsky, who is sometimes called the "father of astronautics." He pointed out that a rocket can operate in a vacuum and suggested that multistage liquid-fuel rockets could escape the earth's gravitation. The greatest name in American rocketry is Robert H. Goddard, whose pamphlet A Method for Reaching Extreme Altitudes anticipated nearly all modern developments. Goddard launched the first liquid-fuel rocket in 1926 and demonstrated that rockets could be used to carry scientific apparatus into the upper atmosphere. His work found its most receptive audience in Germany. During World War II, a German team under Wernher von Braun developed the V-2 rocket, which was the first long-range guided missile. The V-2 had a range greater than 200 mi (322 km) and reached velocities of 3,500 mi (5,600 km) per hr.

After the war, rocket research in the United States and the Soviet Union intensified, leading to the development first of intercontinental ballistic missiles and then of modern spacecraft. Important U.S. rockets have included the Redstone, Jupiter, Atlas, Titan, Agena, Centaur, and Saturn carriers. Saturn V, the largest rocket ever assembled, developed 7.5 million lb (3.4 million kg) of thrust. A three-stage rocket, it stood 300 ft (91 m) high exclusive of payload and with the Apollo delivered a payload of 44 tons to the moon. Rockets presently being used to launch manned and unmanned missions into space include the U.S. Athena 1 and 2, Taurus, Titan 2 and 4B, Delta 2, 3, and 4, Atlas 2 ,3, and 5, and STS or space shuttle; the Chinese Long March 2C, 2E, and 2F; the Russian Soyuz and Proton K and M; the Japanese H-2A; the European Space Agency's Ariane 4 and 5; the Indian PSLV (Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle); the Israeli Shavit 2; and the multinational, private Sea Launch Zenit-3SL, which uses a converted oil platform located some 1,400 mi (2,250 km) southeast of Hawaii.

See also space science.

Bibliography

See G. P. Sutton, Rocket Propulsion Elements: An Introduction to the Engineering of Rockets (6th ed. 1992); F. H. Winter, Rockets into Space (1993); D. Baker, Spaceflight and Rocketry: A Chronology (1996); M. Stoiko, Pioneers of Rocketry (1997); R. Snedden, Rockets and Space (1998).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Rocket in Aeronautics  - 175 results

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...Before considering some of the major aspects ofSoviet air and rocket training something needs to be said about general scientific...opportunities have been provided for organised instruction on aeronautics and electronics greatly in excess of those provided by Western...
...671 686. NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration...C.: GPO. NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration...Informational brochure. NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration...Neufeld, Michael J. 1995. The Rocket and the Reich: Peenemunde...
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...Future Single-Stage Rockets: Reusable and Reliable...11; Ivan Bekey, "SSTO Rockets: A Practical Possibility...Stephen A. Cook, "SSTO Rockets: Streamlining Access to Space...49; Chandler, "Novel Rocket Soars in Tests, But Funds Dont." 61. U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration...
...Engines Branch of the Bureau of Aeronautics. During the ensuing war years...similar responsibilities for rocket engines and for ramjets. Their...initiated the Navys work with rockets soon after receiving his commission...failure. Im amazed he even got a rocket out of the launch tower. Goddard...
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...NERVA (Nuclear Engine for Rocket Vehicle Application) program...development of nuclear thermal rocket propulsion. That story had...Atlas ICBM. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration...creation of a fully functional rocket engine employing a nuclear...crafted account of the nuclear rockets evolution, examines Rover...
...Liquid Hydrogen: The Centaur Upper Stage Rocket, 1958-2002. by James A. Painter...Liquid Hydrogen: The Centaur Upper Stage Rocket, 1958-2002. By Virginia P. Dawson...It won the 2004 American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics History Manuscript Award...
Rockets and People, Vol. 1. by Carl J. Bobrow Rockets and People, Vol. 1. By...international conference on aeronautics and astronautics in Moscow...many facets of the German rocket industry. Chertok built a...respect Chertoks series of books Rockets and People is an incredible...
...It quite rightly complained that the rocket had overshot Japan without prior consultation...something was afoot. Presumably above ground rocket launching sites are kept under close...The report gave some details of the rockets trajectory and the satellites orbit...officials claimed `The third stage of the rocket, which carried a small satellite, broke...
...by Hughes Aircraft and the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. (13) Excerpted from Jacob Neufelds The Development of...257-59. (6.) Frank Ross, Jr., Guided Missiles: Rockets Torpedoes (New York, 1951), pp 109-110 hereafter Ross...
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...suggest that they set up two rubber-band rocket launchers with different launch angles and launch the rockets simultaneously, or they might suggest...the distance that each rubber-band rocket travels. Lead the students to realize...different ways of launching rubber-band rockets. Ask students to make conjectures about...factors might make the rubber-band rocket fly "best" (be purposefully vague...
Lockheed Martin Charged with Sharing Rocket Data with China by Matthew Rice ON APRIL...export control laws by supplying sensitive rocket information to a company partially owned...launched in 1995 on a Chinese Long March rocket, a model that had failed twice in 1992...China and conducted an examination of the rockets kick motor. The State Department contends...
It Doesnt Take a Rocket Scientist; by Constance Adams See also related articles on pages 38, 72, and 74 of same issue Architect Constance Adams was...
The Next Space Thruster Rockets Burn for Mere Minutes. This Engine Runs for Years, Sending Probes to Neptune at 10,000 Miles an Hour by Michael Moyerdarrin...
...Pioneers by Heike Hasenauer ROCKET Pioneers Wernher von...early U.S. military rockets at Redstone Arsenal...of the U.S. Armys rocket program, born of war...1969 via his Saturn V rocket. When astronaut Neil...program or the National Aeronautics and Space Administration...He first built small rockets to learn more about...
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...legally defined term. A rocket must weigh no more than...they can fly multistage rockets whose combined thrusting...standards. Should a model rocket overstep those bounds...permission to fly the rocket, she says. Ms. Roberts...just like the National Aeronautics and Space Administrations rockets. The engines themselves...
...higher than the waist-high rocket model that may help carry...sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and...design - a nuclear-powered rocket built in space using spent...after they are used. Using rocket boosters longer could easily...excited about shooting nuclear rockets from the ground," he said...
...Technology Whose Jobs Really Are Rocket Science. CRAIG CLARK, ROCKET ENGINEER CRAIG wants to launch...before attending the College of Aeronautics at Cranfield in Bedfordshire...Study maths and science. Rocket man: Craig aims to launch...
First Private-Sector Spaceship Rockets into History; Advances Dream of Giving...Howard Price, THE WASHINGTON TIMES A rocket plane flown by a 62-year-old pilot...behind the mission of the three-seat rocket plane, known as SpaceShipOne, say...OKeefe, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, applauded...
Its rocket science; NASA engineer fixes what ails Hubble Byline: William Glanz...year-old engineer is part of a group of 125 persons at the National Aeronautics and Space Administrations Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt taking...
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encyclopedia articles on: Rocket in Aeronautics  - 7 results

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ROCKET , in aeronautics any vehicle propelled by...contained propellants. Rockets are used in fireworks...thrust. Development of Rockets The invention of the rocket is generally ascribed to...the first liquid-fuel rocket in 1926 and demonstrated that rockets could be used to carry scientific...
REDSTONE ARSENAL U.S. rocket research and development center...Command, responsible for the armys rocket and guided missile program; the Army...Munitions Center and School; the National Aeronautics and Space Administration s George...
...vehicle. Developed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA...consists of a winged orbiter, two solid-rocket boosters, and an external tank. As...ring seal in one of the solid fuel rockets was responsible. Shuttle flights were...was forced to reemphasize expendable rockets to reduce the cost of placing payloads...
...the German V-2 rocket and also for other rocket weapons. At the...There he developed rockets for the National Aeronautics and Space Administrations...notably the Saturn rockets used for the Apollo...ardent advocate of rocket development and...
...ESA operates sounding-rocket launch stations in Norway...development of the Ariane rockets used to launch most ESA satellites...times by the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration s...Australia, which placed its rocket-firing range at Woomera...4 were launched on NASA rockets. ELDO, which consisted of...
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