Can Foam Impact Damage the Space Shuttle?

  • Thread starter HCD
  • Start date
In summary, the problem is to derive equations that describe the velocity and distance traveled by a foam after it has come loose from a shuttle in motion. The forces to consider are gravity, the drag force, and the force accelerating the foam in the air flow. The equation for drag force as a function of velocity is given, but the acceleration due to the air flow must be determined. The initial velocity of the foam when it comes loose from the shuttle must be considered in order to determine the force on the foam. The trajectory of the foam can be modeled as a straight line, and the force due to air flow must cancel out the force of gravity in the direction normal to the trajectory. The direction of the air flow relative to the shuttle and the
  • #1
HCD
9
1

Homework Statement



Problem statement in attached file.

Homework Equations


[/B]
Drag force as a function of velocity for a body immersed in a fluid:
$$ \boldsymbol{F}_D = \frac{1}{2} \rho \boldsymbol{v}^2 C_D A, $$
where ## \boldsymbol{F}_D ## is the drag force, ## \rho ## is the density of the fluid, ## \boldsymbol{v} ## is the speed of the object relative to the fluid, ## C_D ## is the cross sectional area of the body and ## A ## is the drag coefficient.

The Attempt at a Solution



I'm trying to model the forces acting on the foam after it came loose from the shuttle. From the problem statement I'm assuming that the forces that should be considered are gravity, the drag force and whatever force is accelerating the foam in the air flow. That is
$$ \boldsymbol{F} = m \boldsymbol{g} + m \boldsymbol{a}_A - \frac{1}{2} \rho \boldsymbol{v}^2 C_D A, $$
but I'm not sure how to model the acceleration due to the air flow. I'm guessing that it has something to do with the velocity of the shuttle?
 

Attachments

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  • #2
I think there must be something missing from your problem statement. What is it you are supposed to calculate? Also, I don't see an estimate of the shuttle's acceleration at the time the foam fell off. As a ball-park value it is probably something around 5g.

Anyway, what is the initial velocity of the foam when it first loses contact with the shuttle? That gives you some idea of the force on the foam. Then, given the force, how do you get the acceleration at that moment?

You then have a system of forces on a mass. Those forces depend on the velocity. You have a differential equation to solve.
 
  • #3
I'm trying to model the forces acting on the foam after it came loose from the shuttle. From the problem statement I'm assuming that the forces that should be considered are gravity, the drag force and whatever force is accelerating the foam in the air flow. That is
F=mg+ma A −12 ρv 2 CD A,
Does the drag force make the foam go faster than the shuttle or slower?
If you change the word accelerating to decceleration, or negative acceleration...

An object can accelerate in the same direction as its velocity increasing its speed, or in the opposite direction as its velocity which should do what?
 
  • #4
DEvens said:
I think there must be something missing from your problem statement. What is it you are supposed to calculate? Also, I don't see an estimate of the shuttle's acceleration at the time the foam fell off. As a ball-park value it is probably something around 5g.

Anyway, what is the initial velocity of the foam when it first loses contact with the shuttle? That gives you some idea of the force on the foam. Then, given the force, how do you get the acceleration at that moment?

You then have a system of forces on a mass. Those forces depend on the velocity. You have a differential equation to solve.

The problem is to derive the equations that describe the velocity as well as the distance traveled by the foam as functions of time, but my problem is to model the forces acting on the foam due to the air flow.

I was thinking of two possibilities, one where I should model the force due to air flow using the data in the problem statement, including maybe the velocity of the shuttle, and another where I should model the trajectory of the foam as a straight line (as I feel like that is kind of indicated in the problem statement) and that should somehow get me to the force due to air flow.

In either case the foam starts from rest in the inertial reference frame of the shuttle (I'm assuming it's inertial since only the velocity of the shuttle is given in the time interval under consideration), but in the latter case there is no acceleration in the direction normal to the trajectory meaning that in this direction the force due to air flow must cancel the force of gravity. But still that says nothing about the force due to air flow in the direction tangent to the trajectory. Does it?

256bits said:
Does the drag force make the foam go faster than the shuttle or slower?
If you change the word accelerating to decceleration, or negative acceleration...

An object can accelerate in the same direction as its velocity increasing its speed, or in the opposite direction as its velocity which should do what?

In the model I had in mind the only effect of the shuttle speeding past the foam is to generate air flow in which the foam accelerates. Are you suggesting otherwise?
 
  • #5
In the model I had in mind the only effect of the shuttle speeding past the foam is to generate air flow in which the foam accelerates.

I have no idea what you mean by that statement.

According to the problem, the velocity of the shuttle is given as Vshuttle = 2500 ft/sec. We can assume that is in the direction upwards away from the Earth and not downwards. That may seem obvious but it is the first step even if one did not have to ponder too much about it, but it is important.

If the shuttle is traveling upwards, in what direction is the air moving relative to the shuttle?
If the shuttle is traveling downwards, in what direction is the air moving relative to the shuttle?
Are they in the same direction in both cases?
Hopefully you answer No.

For either case is what direction is the drag on the foam? Is it always in the opposite direction to the mg force,?

whatever force is accelerating the foam in the air flow
That is what you should be looking at. Consider a piece of foam that comes off when the shuttle is traveling upwards in the vacuum of space where there is no air.
Does the y-location of the foam change wrt the shuttle?

So, in air what force causes the fom to move relative to the shuttle?

Working out the movement of the foam wrt an inertial shuttle due to the brief time period is an OK stategy. It would be the nearly the same thing as putting the shuttle in a vertical wind tunnel and blowing the air past the shuttle at 2500 ft/sec. In that case, it is easy to conceive of the foam accelerating from zero velocity wrt the shuttle to a value when it hits the wing.
 
  • #6
256bits said:
I have no idea what you mean by that statement.

According to the problem, the velocity of the shuttle is given as Vshuttle = 2500 ft/sec. We can assume that is in the direction upwards away from the Earth and not downwards. That may seem obvious but it is the first step even if one did not have to ponder too much about it, but it is important.

If the shuttle is traveling upwards, in what direction is the air moving relative to the shuttle?
If the shuttle is traveling downwards, in what direction is the air moving relative to the shuttle?
Are they in the same direction in both cases?
Hopefully you answer No.

For either case is what direction is the drag on the foam? Is it always in the opposite direction to the mg force,?That is what you should be looking at. Consider a piece of foam that comes off when the shuttle is traveling upwards in the vacuum of space where there is no air.
Does the y-location of the foam change wrt the shuttle?

So, in air what force causes the fom to move relative to the shuttle?

Working out the movement of the foam wrt an inertial shuttle due to the brief time period is an OK stategy. It would be the nearly the same thing as putting the shuttle in a vertical wind tunnel and blowing the air past the shuttle at 2500 ft/sec. In that case, it is easy to conceive of the foam accelerating from zero velocity wrt the shuttle to a value when it hits the wing.

Are you saying that drag is what accelerates the foam relative to the shuttle in the first place? That means that in the first instant after the foam comes loose from the shuttle the forces acting on the foam are
$$ \boldsymbol{F} = \left[ mg + \frac{1}{2} \rho (2500\textrm { ft/s})^2 C_D A \right] \boldsymbol{e}_j, $$
right? But how do I model the forces for the remainder of time under consideration? And I'm still confused since the trajectory of the foam doesn't seem to be parallel to the trajectory of the shuttle, or why would the wing span be given in the problem statement?
 
  • #7
And I'm still confused since the trajectory of the foam doesn't seem to be parallel to the trajectory of the shuttle, or why would the wing span be given in the problem statement
Initially, I would just assume that the foam moves straight back and hits the wing and treat the problem as 1-D as a first approximation.

Since the shuttle is shaped somewhat as a triangle in one plane, the air has to move sideways as well as towards the rear along the surface of the shuttle, so it has an x and a y component and a resultant with somewhat greater velocity. A second approximation would determine the resultant air speed assuming a traingle given by the dimensions of the shuttle and assume the foam will be induced to follow the same path. Except that we are not given the dimensions of the shuttle, so from the picture one could use the 78 ft and from the top view, estimate the detach point and contact point by the transfer of the arrow, if the arrow head is the contact point. Length of arrow is 56 ft, and one should be able to work out the other dimensions of the foam motion, taking into account also that it appears to follow a path towards the top of the shuttle. That is the only reason I can see that they gave you the wingspan.
Compare that to your first estimate of the foam velocity wrt the shuttle at contact.

Are you saying that drag is what accelerates the foam relative to the shuttle in the first place? That means that in the first instant after the foam comes loose from the shuttle the forces acting on the foam are
( What is that ej thing mean, especially e )
That should make sense, yes. From an observer, on the ground, at detachment the foam is moving upwars at the same speed as the shuttle. Gravity and drag should both be acting downwards, slowing the foam down in its ascent. From an observer on the shuttle, gravity and drag are both accelerating the foam downwards. Make sense.

One way to "solve" the problem is to assume a constant drag force ( from the 2500 ft/sec velocity ) just to see where you are at with the minimum time to impact and maximum velocity at impact.

And then go on to the differential equation , which DEvans suggested. He should be able to help you with setting up.
 
  • #8
256bits said:
Initially, I would just assume that the foam moves straight back and hits the wing and treat the problem as 1-D as a first approximation.

Since the shuttle is shaped somewhat as a triangle in one plane, the air has to move sideways as well as towards the rear along the surface of the shuttle, so it has an x and a y component and a resultant with somewhat greater velocity. A second approximation would determine the resultant air speed assuming a traingle given by the dimensions of the shuttle and assume the foam will be induced to follow the same path. Except that we are not given the dimensions of the shuttle, so from the picture one could use the 78 ft and from the top view, estimate the detach point and contact point by the transfer of the arrow, if the arrow head is the contact point. Length of arrow is 56 ft, and one should be able to work out the other dimensions of the foam motion, taking into account also that it appears to follow a path towards the top of the shuttle. That is the only reason I can see that they gave you the wingspan.
Compare that to your first estimate of the foam velocity wrt the shuttle at contact.( What is that ej thing mean, especially e )
That should make sense, yes. From an observer, on the ground, at detachment the foam is moving upwars at the same speed as the shuttle. Gravity and drag should both be acting downwards, slowing the foam down in its ascent. From an observer on the shuttle, gravity and drag are both accelerating the foam downwards. Make sense.

One way to "solve" the problem is to assume a constant drag force ( from the 2500 ft/sec velocity ) just to see where you are at with the minimum time to impact and maximum velocity at impact.

And then go on to the differential equation , which DEvans suggested. He should be able to help you with setting up.

Okay, let's simplify the problem to 1-dimension and assume that drag due to air flow is constant. Then in the first instant after the foam comes loose from the shuttle the force ## F_0 ## acting on the foam can be modeled as
$$ F_0 = mg + \frac{1}{2} \rho (2500 \textrm{ ft/s})^2 C_D A. $$
But as the foam starts to speed towards the Earth it's velocity relative to the shuttle ## v ## starts to be non-negligible and as a consequence drag starts to act also in the direction away from the earth, so for the time under consideration we could model the forces acting on the foam as
$$ F = mg + \frac{1}{2} \rho (2500 \textrm{ ft/s})^2 C_D A - \frac{1}{2} \rho v^2 C_D A. $$
Terminal velocity ## v_f ## is characterised by the following equation,
$$ 0 = g + \frac{1}{2} \rho (2500 \textrm{ ft/s})^2 \frac{C_D A}{m} - \frac{1}{2} \rho v_f^2 \frac{C_D A}{m}. $$
Which can be solved to get the terminal velocity as follows,
$$ v_f = \sqrt{\frac{2(mg + F_a)}{C_D A \rho}} = \sqrt{\frac{2 \cdot 21554\textrm{ lb ft/s}^2}{C_D A \rho}} = 1770\textrm{ ft/s}, $$
where ## F_a ## is the force due to air flow. This allows us to express the acceleration as a function of velocity introducing the terminal velocity as
$$ a(v) = 10777 \textrm{ ft/s}^2 \left[1 - \left( \frac{v}{v_f} \right)^2 \right], $$
where ## 10777 \textrm{ ft/s}^2 ## is ## (mg + F_a)/m ##.

Now, using the relationship
$$ t(v) = t_0 + \int_{v_0}^v \frac{dv}{a(v)} $$
we can write
$$ t(v) = \frac{1}{10777 \textrm{ ft/s}^2} \cdot \int_{0}^v \frac{dv}{1 - (v/v_f)^2} = \frac{v_f}{2 \cdot 10777 \textrm{ ft/s}^2} \cdot \ln \left( \frac{v_f + v}{v_f - v}\right), $$
which can be solved for ## v ## to obtain
$$ v(t) = v_f \cdot \frac{e^{2 \cdot \left( 10777 \textrm{ ft/s}^2 \right) \cdot t / v_f} - 1}{e^{-2 \cdot \left( 10777 \textrm{ ft/s}^2 \right) \cdot t / v_f} + 1}. $$
We could even obtain the velocity as a function of the traveled distance from the relationship
$$ s(v) = s_0 + \int_{v_0}^v \frac{v \cdot dv}{a(v)} $$
by writing
$$ s(v) = \frac{1}{10777 \textrm{ ft/s}^2} \int_0^v \frac{v \cdot dv}{1 - (v/v_f)^2} = - \frac{v_f^2}{2 \cdot 10777 \textrm{ ft/s}^2} \cdot \ln \left( 1 - (v/v_f)^2 \right). $$
Which can be solved for ## v ## to obtain
$$ v(s) = v_f \sqrt{1 - e^{2 \cdot \left( 10777 \textrm{ ft/s}^2 \right) \cdot s / v_f^2}}. $$
Finally we can evaluate this last function for the flight path length of the foam in the air stream,
$$ v(56 \textrm{ ft}) = 1001 \textrm{ ft/s}. $$
But the answer given to the velocity of the foam when it strikes the wing is about 840 fps, which means that something is wrong with this model.
 
Last edited:
  • #9
HCD said:
But as the foam starts to speed towards the Earth it's velocity relative to the shuttle ## v ## starts to be non-negligible and as a consequence drag starts to act also in the direction away from the earth.

No that's not correct.
There a single drag force due to the relative velocity of the foam in the fluid. It is in the opposite direction to the fluid velocity relative to the foam.
That is, the drag force is downward, towards earth.

To consider terminal velocity as you did, when the foam block first detaches and is traveling upward makes no sense, there is no terminal velocity in this direction. No steady state can be reached, all forces are acting downward.
I haven't done the math but I would bet the farm the foam is still traveling upward when it hits the shuttle.
If the foam did not hit the shuttle (or bounced off) it would lose it's upwards (away from earth) velocity due to the downward drag and gravity forces and come to stop.
It would then start to descend towards the earth, only then will an upward drag force exist and only then will terminal velocity become relevant.
 
  • #10
billy_joule said:
No that's not correct.
There a single drag force due to the relative velocity of the foam in the fluid. It is in the opposite direction to the fluid velocity relative to the foam.
That is, the drag force is downward, towards earth.

To consider terminal velocity as you did, when the foam block first detaches and is traveling upward makes no sense, there is no terminal velocity in this direction. No steady state can be reached, all forces are acting downward.
I haven't done the math but I would bet the farm the foam is still traveling upward when it hits the shuttle.
If the foam did not hit the shuttle (or bounced off) it would lose it's upwards (away from earth) velocity due to the downward drag and gravity forces and come to stop.
It would then start to descend towards the earth, only then will an upward drag force exist and only then will terminal velocity become relevant.

That all makes perfect sense, thanks. But then how would you model the problem?
 
  • #11
HCD said:
But then how would you model the problem?

I don't know what the problem is, there's no question in the problem statement!
I assume you need to find relative impact velocity, which is the change in velocity of the foam during the 0.15 seconds of flight time during which gravity and drag act on it.
Always start with a free body diagram, it would've saved a lot of time in this case. Then develop the differential equation.

If you aren't familiar with Diff. eqns. you could make some approximations. You know the distance the foam traveled relative to the shuttle and the shuttle speed so can find the distance traveled by the foam relative to the air/earth, along with the 0.15 s travel time you can find the foams average velocity. You can make some assumption about the deceleration of the foam and get an impact velocity. An iterative solution in excel should be pretty straight forward.
Of course, this method can be done without the use of the drag equation which misses the point of the exercise..
..
 
  • #12
billy_joule said:
I don't know what the problem is, there's no question in the problem statement!
I assume you need to find relative impact velocity, which is the change in velocity of the foam during the 0.15 seconds of flight time during which gravity and drag act on it.
Always start with a free body diagram, it would've saved a lot of time in this case. Then develop the differential equation.

If you aren't familiar with Diff. eqns. you could make some approximations. You know the distance the foam traveled relative to the shuttle and the shuttle speed so can find the distance traveled by the foam relative to the air/earth, along with the 0.15 s travel time you can find the foams average velocity. You can make some assumption about the deceleration of the foam and get an impact velocity. An iterative solution in excel should be pretty straight forward.
Of course, this method can be done without the use of the drag equation which misses the point of the exercise..
..

Here is what I understood so far.

In the first instant under consideration the foam has zero velocity relative to the shuttle and a velocity of 2500 ft/s relative to the atmosphere. Still in that instant, the foam is experiencing a force due to gravity as well as drag caused by the relative motion of 2500 ft/s between the foam and the atmosphere. I could model the forces in that first instant as
$$ F_0 = mg + \frac{1}{2} \rho (2500 \textrm{ ft/s})^2 C_D A, $$
where ## \rho ## is the density of the atmosphere, ## C_D ## is the cross sectional area of the foam and ## A ## is the drag coefficient.

In the next instant the force due to gravity acts the same but the drag force on the foam changes since the velocity of the foam relative to the atmosphere changes. My question is how do I model the forces throughout the time under consideration? Not just in the first instant. Could I model the forces as
$$ F_0 = mg + \frac{1}{2} \rho (2500 \text{ ft/s} - v)^2 C_D A? $$
where ## v ## is the velocity of the foam relative to the shuttle?
 

Related to Can Foam Impact Damage the Space Shuttle?

1. Why is foam a potential hazard for the shuttle?

Foam is a potential hazard for the shuttle because it can break off from the external fuel tank during launch and strike the fragile heat shield on the underside of the shuttle. This can cause damage to the heat shield, which is essential for protecting the shuttle and its crew during re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere.

2. How does foam damage the shuttle's heat shield?

When foam strikes the heat shield, it can create a dent or even puncture the protective tiles or panels. This damage can compromise the heat shield's ability to protect the shuttle from the intense heat of re-entry, potentially leading to catastrophic failure.

3. Has foam caused damage to the shuttle in the past?

Yes, foam has caused damage to the shuttle in the past. The most notable example is the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003, where a piece of foam struck the shuttle's left wing during launch, leading to the shuttle's destruction during re-entry and the loss of all seven crew members.

4. What measures have been taken to prevent foam from damaging the shuttle?

After the Columbia disaster, NASA implemented several changes to reduce the risk of foam damage to the shuttle. These include redesigning the external fuel tank to reduce the amount of foam used and modifying the application process to make the foam more secure. NASA also conducts thorough inspections of the shuttle's heat shield before and during each mission to check for any potential damage.

5. Can foam be completely eliminated as a risk for the shuttle?

While NASA has taken significant steps to reduce the risk of foam damage, it is impossible to completely eliminate it as a risk. The external fuel tank must still use foam for insulation, and there is always a chance that a small piece may break off during launch. However, NASA continues to monitor and improve the safety measures surrounding foam to ensure the continued success and safety of shuttle missions.

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