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Idea for a high speed "craft"...would this work? |
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| Aug6-07, 11:38 AM | #1 |
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Idea for a high speed "craft"...would this work?
Note: since I am not a physicist, I can't be certain how foolish I might sound if the following hypothetical device would not be physically possible (or economically useful, for that matter), but I'm a curious sort of fellow, so I'd appreciate any expert opinion on it, anyway.
Imagine one were travelling in some kind of rocket-powered craft (in a vacuum) which had a maximum speed of about 1 mile per second, because the fuel simply cannot burn/expand any faster. But, this craft had a mineature version of itself on board. The mini-craft takes off. Could it reach a speed of 2 miles per second? And, would it be theoretically possible to reach much higher speeds by having a whole 'stack' of craft with progressively smaller versions of themselves, each taking off when the previous reached maximum speed, until eventually reaching near light speed? |
| Aug6-07, 12:30 PM | #2 |
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You seem to be under the impression that rockets are limited to the speed of their exhaust. This is simply not true, the only thing that limits the top speed of a rocket is how much fuel it carries.
Other than that, what you suggest sounds like a stage rocket. |
| Aug6-07, 12:45 PM | #3 |
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| Aug6-07, 12:57 PM | #4 |
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Idea for a high speed "craft"...would this work?
Gravity is still at work in outerspace, it's just a lot weaker, right? All other forces such as accelerationand forces of decleretion would also apply, right?
The "classic myth" or example of falling in an elevator (constant rate of acceleration) and jumping up at the last second to avoid sudden decleration comes to mind. You will still die and be crushed, the moving body continues to move. The TV program recently had an episode on this, they put springs on a mannequin and some kind of charge I think - it would of been a mess had it been a real person. Back to our moving body coasting along with its mass as it continues to move in space, detach the probe craft/booster/stage.........................what happens? The former single mass becomes two masses traveling at the same rate. For the new smaller stage rocket mass to travel faster it needs to expell a force greater than it's mass and greater than the mass/rate already being traveled at. It's like me traveling in the back of my parents station wagon as a kid. If I stuck my butt out the tailgate and blew a fart would it make the car go any faster? Not unless the farts force was greater than the forces acting upon the car already. Just a fart in the wind. EDIT: Conclusion; The new smaller stage rocket needs to expell more force than it's current mass is traveling at to go any faster. It also will need to expell an equal force (F=MA) in the opposite direction to stop dead in space. Question, will the loss of mass slow down the parent body? Is the speed or rate of accleration dependent on mass or is it only gravity which is dependent on mass? In a vacuum two bodies of different masses will accelerate/fall at the same rate (Galileo and the leaning tower of Pizza experiments). I still think they (the parent and the stage) will continue to travel at the same rate, attached or not. |
| Aug6-07, 05:49 PM | #5 |
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Note, for a rocket in space, there are no friction forces to be overcome. once a rocket reaches speed, it will no longer need to run its engines in order to continue at that speed. Under these conditions any additional speed it gains from an extra push will be retained. |
| Aug6-07, 06:17 PM | #6 |
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So, Janus, you are saying that the craft I described would work?
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| Aug6-07, 07:48 PM | #7 |
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This is existing technology that you can easily find on the net. No. You will not achieve any meaningful percentage of the speed of light with any chemical rocket. |
| Aug6-07, 08:17 PM | #8 |
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Here's a picture of the Saturn V rocket used for the Apollo missions, notice that it uses a series of stages. As each stage uses up its fuel, it is discarded. This is done to save on the weight lifted to orbit. One drawback to this design is that when you discard each stage, you also throw away engines. The reason that this design was used for the Saturn V was that it had to be aerodynamic in order to pass through the atmosphere. In space, where this is not an issue, you can just use "strapped on" fuel tanks which you discard as they are emptied, and you just use the same engine. As far as your idea making it possible to reach near light speed, As I said before, there is nothing preventing a single stage rocket from reaching that speed as long as it carries enough fuel. The real problem is, that with the efficiency of today's rockets, it would take more fuel than the entire mass of the Sun to reach even a fraction of the speed of light. Your idea doesn't address that problem. The total launch mass of your "nested ship" would have be of the same order. IOW, impossibly large. |
| Aug7-07, 09:59 AM | #9 |
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gee , why we cant reach speed of light is not bcoz of the fact that we cant get enough acceleration for enough time, its because of a guy called einstien gave some theory(i know ;)), theory of relativity). read it and you ll know, why speed of light cant be reached
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| Aug7-07, 10:36 AM | #10 |
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The advantage of having a staged rocket in deep space would be being able to lessen the mass at will. Gravitational forces encountered such as passing by a large planet or "black hole" act on the mass of the rocket surely as gravity acts on us while on Earth. Example-2: Merry-Go-Round You sit on the Merry-Go-Round; your friend pushes the grab bar faster and faster until contact with his hand acts to slow you down more than to speed you up. Your friend must be able to exceed the velocity of his last push for you to go any faster. |
| Aug7-07, 11:05 AM | #11 |
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Recognitions:
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The merry go round is not an applicable example.
The thrust of a rocket is proportional to the characteristic velocity of the exhaust. The speed of the rocket is not. As long as the rocket is putting out any kind of thrust, it will accelerate. |
| Aug7-07, 11:20 AM | #12 |
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Is it only considered "THRUST" if it's traveling faster than the rocket? Let's say my rocket is traveling through space at 1/2 the speed of light. My main fuel tank runs out of propellant. I switch to another tank which for some odd reason shoots out gasses at only 1/4 the speed of light. What would the result of this situation be? |
| Aug7-07, 01:13 PM | #13 |
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Recognitions:
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It will acelerate.
Remember the fuel is already doing 1/2 the speed of light when it is still in the tank, when you shoot out at 1/4 of the speed of light 'relative to the engine' it is still moving relative to the engine and will provide thrust. |
| Aug7-07, 02:15 PM | #14 |
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That answer eludes my primary processors.
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| Aug7-07, 02:43 PM | #15 |
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Recognitions:
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| Aug7-07, 03:15 PM | #16 |
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| Aug7-07, 05:56 PM | #17 |
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[tex]\Delta v = v_e \ln (MR) [/tex] where [itex]\Delta v[/itex] is the change of velocity [itex]v_e[/itex] is the exhaust velocity relative to the rocket. [itex]MR[/itex] is the mass ratio, or the mass of the fully fueled rocket divided by the mass of the rocket after the fuel is used up. Notice that the starting velocity of the rocket does not enter into the equation at all. Another point that should be made is that if your conception of how rocket propulsion works were true, then we would have never been able to put even one satellite into orbit. Our best rocket engines produce a exhaust velocity of about 4500 m/s. Low Earth orbital velocity(the speed you need to be traveling to maintain orbit.) is about 7750 m/s. If a rocket can't travel faster than its exhaust velocity, then none of our rockets could reach orbital velocity, and put a satellite into orbit. But our rockets do put satellites into orbit even with exhaust velocities less than orbital velocity. Real life example shows your conception to be wrong. |
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