Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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Launch Vehicles and Orbits

description

Launch Vehicles and Orbits. How Rockets Work. Newton's Laws of Motion are: An object at rest tends to remain at rest An object in motion tends to remain in motion For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Conservation of Momentum. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Page 1: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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How Rockets Work

• Newton's Laws of Motion are:

–An object at rest tends to remain at rest

–An object in motion tends to remain in motion

–For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction

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Conservation of Momentum

• Newton's Laws are all contained in a more general principle called conservation of momentum.

• Momentum is mass times velocity

• In a system that is not disturbed from outside, the total momentum stays constant.

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Conservation of Momentum Means:

• If velocity is zero, momentum is zero (Newton's First Law)

• If velocity is not zero, and mass doesn't change, then velocity doesn't change (Newton's Second Law)

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Conservation of Momentum and Newton’s Third Law

• If mass changes somehow, then so does velocity.

• If an object is stationary, and flings off mass, the rest of the mass moves in the opposite direction.

• The flung off mass has positive momentum, the rest has negative momentum, and the total momentum remains zero (Newton's Third Law).

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Conservation of Momentum

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Rockets and Jets• Rockets and jets work according to

Newton's Third Law.

• They fire mass out at high speed and acquire velocity in the opposite direction.

• They do not need something to push against. They move because they are expelling exhaust gases at high speeds.

• Tthe rocket or jet is pushing mass away, and the mass is pushing back (equal and opposite reaction.)

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How Rockets and Jets Differ

• Rockets and jets expel mass by burning fuel.

• A jet gets the oxygen for combustion from the atmosphere

• A rocket carries oxygen in some form with it.

• Thus rockets can function outside the Earth's atmosphere; jets can't.

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Rockets are Mostly Fuel (and Oxygen)

• A rocket or jet has to carry all its remaining fuel with it. (And oxygen, if it’s a rocket).

• Most of the mass of the Space Shuttle is fuel, and most of that is used to get the remaining fuel off the ground.

• The miles-per-gallon fuel economy of the Space Shuttle in its first foot off the ground is pretty terrible!

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About Orbits and Satellites

• Satellites travel elliptical paths with the center of the Earth at one focus (Kepler's First Law)

• Inertia causes object to continue moving in a straight line

• Gravity pulls object to Earth

• Balance between the two = orbit

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Newton’s Mountain

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Important Orbits• Low vs. High Inclination

• Almost all are Prograde

• Polar Orbits for global coverage

• Circular Orbits strongly preferred– Constant altitude– Constant speed

• Sun-Synchronous

• Geosynchronous

• 12-Hour (GPS)

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About Orbits• You do not need to expend fuel to stay in

orbit

• Satellites need attitude control fuel to correct for atmospheric drag, lunar and solar gravity, etc.

• May want thrusters to help maintain orbits

• Spin stabilization helps

• Once below 200 km, atmospheric braking leads to re-entry

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About Orbits

• The focus of a satellite orbit is the center of the earth

• The plane of a satellite orbit always passes through the center of the earth

• There is no such thing as an orbit over the poles, over a small region, etc.

• It is possible to have an orbit over the equator

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Precession• Put sideways force on anything moving in

a circle, it will precess

• Precession affects planetary rotation

• Precession also affects orbits

• We can control precession of satellites by selecting orbital inclination

• Fixed with respect to stars

• Fixed with respect to sun

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Precession

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Precession

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Precession

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Three Pioneers of Rocketry

• Konstantin Tsiolkovsky (1857-1935)– Worked out theoretical problems of

spaceflight

• Robert Goddard (1882-1945)– First Liquid Fuel Rocket

• Hermann Oberth (1894-1989)– Helped create operational rockets

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Robert Goddard -

First Liquid-Fuel

Rocket, 1926

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The V-1

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The V-2

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From Sapwood to

Sputnik• An existing rocket, the

SS-6, was used.• The warhead section

was removed• A cluster of four more

SS-6 engines was bolted around a central engine

• Very Dependable

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Sputnik I

• October 4, 1957• S- (with) +

put’ (path) +-nik (one who) =Sputnik

• Literally, one who follows the same path

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Early Rockets, Kennedy Space Center

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Early Rockets, Huntsville AL

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V-2 Huntsville AL

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V-2 shrapnel

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V-2 Components

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Gemini, 1965

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Sensor Technology• Passive (senses only ambient signals)

• Active (emits signals)

• Imaging

• Non-Imaging

• Scanning (mechanical or electronic)

• Non-scanning

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The Single Most

Valuable Product of the Space Program

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Crescent Earth

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Himalayas from Space Shuttle

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Volcano, Alaska

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Fringing Reefs

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Icebergs, Antarctica

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A Noble Myth

“In my life, I've seen the images from space of a blue-white-green world — there are no political lines drawn on this planet.

• Luis J. Rodriguez

“The border between the United States and Mexico is an imaginary line. It cannot be seen from space”

• The Border Zone: A History of Trade between the United States and Mexico, Julia Albright; Age of Irony, Winter 2004

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“You Can’t See Borders From Space”

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Mexican Border

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Mexican Border

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Menominee County, WI

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U.S.-Canadian Border

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Landsat View of

Green Bay

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Landsat View of Green Bay

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Landsat view of

Washington D.C.

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Radar Image of New York

City

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Spy Satellite Views of Soviet Aircraft Carrier

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Spy Satellite View of Soviet Airfield

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World Trade Center, September 11, 2001

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Pope John Paul II Funeral

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Pope John Paul II Funeral

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Barack Obama’s Inauguration

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Barack Obama’s

Inauguration

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And Now For Something Completely Different….

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Gulf Stream in Infrared

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Ultraviolet View of Earth

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The Ocean Floor From Space

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Earth and Moon Together

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Really Remote Sensing

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An Eclipse of the Sun – By Earth