Originally posted by Rockazella
What creates an explosion? I used to think it had to do with large amounts of heat energy being released very quickly. The heat would then cause air to expand very rapidly and thus you get your explosion and shock wave.
This explanation would mean that explosions couldn't really exist in space (no air or any gas).
However I read an article on nuclear explosion propelled space craft, and now I'm not so sure I have explosions correct. The article said the spacecraft could simply harness the explosions with the use of a large parathute type thing. If this is true, what's really involved in an explosion?
with several ordinary chemical explosives like trinitrotoluene and black powder the explosive material is formulated to release a large volume of gas (as well as heat)
TNT is C7 H5 N3 O6 (this proportional formula does not give structure)
You can imagine it yielding a lot of CO, and N2 and stuff.
one big molecule breaking up and yielding a great many small molecules of gas occupying a large volume---big increase of entropy
The TNT explosion is not caused by heating surrounding air so much as by suddenly producing a large volume of hot gas
consisting of the chemical results of the molecule breaking up.
Black powder does something analogous. It produces CO and CO2 and N2 and stuff like that by a reaction between
KNO3 potassium nitrate
C charcoal
S sulfur
The sulfur is there to give the potassium something to do
after it gives up its NO3 nitrate.
The C is there to take some of the oxygen from the freed-up
NO3 and make gas molecules (CO and CO2)
and the N is there to make N2 and other gas molecules.
These things are mixed in correct proportion to make the most
amount of gas. So that is oldfashioned gunpowder.
Again, it is not heating the surrounding air so much as making gas, which will be hot because of the reaction heat (as in the case of TNT).
The volume a gas occupies depends on the number of molecules---so an explosive designer should try to have the results be a lot of small gaseous molecules
Explosives should work fine in space for many of the same purposes. You do not need heated air for many purposes that
explosives are used for.
NUCLEAR fireballs are plasma. The plasma takes the place of the hot expanding gas from a chemical explosion. To a first approximation the fireball can be treated as a "gas" of electrons.
I believe that thermodynamically the electrons are more important than the nuclei in describing the fireball. Even the metal casing becomes plasma. The result can be thought of as an expanding ionized gas. There have been schemes to propel rockets by a series of nuclear explosions at least since the 1950s (Freeman Dyson was an early proponent).
This is only a very partial and un-expert answer, but maybe more information will come in this thread.
Personally I do not like that nuclear explosion space propulsion idea because it is scary. I believe cleaner more controlled schemes can be developed.