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Rockets Aerospace.

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Presentation on theme: "Rockets Aerospace."— Presentation transcript:

1 Rockets Aerospace

2 Today’s Topics History of Rocketry Define a rocket
Examine the physics behind rocketry Define the mechanics of a rocket Name the 4 major systems of a rocket

3 History of Rocketry Chinese were using rockets in the early 13th century As early as the 15th century rockets constructed with gunpowder were used in war Colonel William Congreve British artillery expert Refined gunpowder for rockets & created stabilizing guides Increased launch range from 300 yards to a few thousand

4 History of Rocketry Dr. Robert Goddard Father of Modern Rocketry
First scientist to use liquid propellants (gas and liquid oxygen) in a rocket (1926) Goddard’s research along with Hermann Oberth was the catalyst for the German V-2 rockets used in WWII V-2

5 Newton’s Laws & Rocketry
1st Law: A body in a state of rest and a body in motion tend to remain at rest or in uniform motion unless acted upon by some outside force. Law of inertia The thrust must be greater than the weight of the rocket Example: Apollo spacecraft weighted 6,000,000 lbs. & the Saturn V rocket produced 7,500,000 lbs of thrust

6 Newton’s Laws & Rocketry
2nd Law: The rate of change in the momentum of a body is proportional to the force acting upon the body and is in the direction of the force. At liftoff a rocket seems very slow because its mass is only slightly less then the thrust being produced however, as the launch progress its speed increases because it weighs less but is producing the same thrust

7 Newton’s Laws & Rocketry
3rd Law: To every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. The thrust produced in a rocket is a reactive force acting in a direction opposite to the direction of the exhaust.

8 Rocket Systems Modern rockets consist of four major systems
The airframe system The propulsion system The guidance system The control system

9 Airframe System Contains the other systems and to provide aerodynamics
Must be structurally strong but lightweight Capable of withstanding extreme heat, vibration and stress.

10 Propulsion System Consists of the following: Propellant used
Containers for the propellant All the plumbing of the system

11 Guidance & Control System
The brain of the rocket A self-contained electronic unit that employs a computer for tracking Computer is preprogrammed for the desired flight trajectory Changes can be made post lift off Control: Follows the directions put forth by the guidance system

12 Types of Rockets Solid-Fuel Rockets Liquid-Fuel Rockets
Solid propellant is called grain Composed of fuel and oxidizer mixture Fuel burns in the combustion chamber and exhaust escapes through a nozzle Cannot stop a solid rocket once started Liquid-Fuel Rockets Powered by fuel and oxidizer Stored in separate tanks Can shutdown engine once takeoff begins

13 Forces Affecting Flight
Thrust Force generated by the rocket engine Gravity Downward force applied to all objects on earth Drag Amount of resistance or friction on the rocket as it flies

14 Airframe-Propulsion-Guidance-Control
Review Who is the father of modern rocketry? What was the name of rocket used by the Germans in WWII? What are the four major systems of a rocket? What are the two types of rockets? Robert Goddard V-2 Airframe-Propulsion-Guidance-Control Solid & Liquid Rockets

15 Assignment First read ch. 12 Section A in the Aviation Fundamentals book and complete questions 1-12 in the workbook Start designing for your H2O rocket project Refer to the rubric for the details of the assignment


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