What is the Initial Mass of Fuel Needed for a Rocket to Reach 0.1c?

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves calculating the initial mass of fuel required for a rocket to reach a velocity of 0.1c, given a hypothetical exhaust speed of 3 × 10^5 m/s and a final mass of 1 ton. The original poster derives an equation based on the rocket's velocity change and exhaust speed but encounters an issue leading to an infinite result.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Conceptual clarification

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the interpretation of the variables in the rocket equation, particularly the initial velocity and exhaust speed. There is confusion regarding the definition of v0 and its application in the context of the problem. Some participants suggest that the initial velocity should be zero, while others question this assumption based on the problem statement.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants exploring different interpretations of the problem and clarifying the roles of the variables involved. Some guidance has been offered regarding the correct understanding of the exhaust speed versus initial speed, but no consensus has been reached on the implications of these definitions.

Contextual Notes

There are indications that the problem may involve relativistic effects due to the final speed being a significant fraction of the speed of light, which could affect the applicability of the classical rocket equation used by the original poster.

Dopplershift
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The problem states:
Typical chemical fuels yield exhaust speeds of the order of 103 m/s. Let us imagine we had a fuel that gives v0 = 3 × 105 m/s. What initial mass of fuel would the rocket need in order to attain a final velocity of 0.1c for a final mass of 1 ton?

I derived the equation in the first part of the problem:
\begin{equation}
v - v_0 = v_e \ln(\frac{m_0}{m})
\end{equation}

Solving for the initial mass, m, yields
\begin{equation}
m_0 = me^{\frac{\Delta v}{v_e)}}
\end{equation}

I plug in that.

0.1c = 3.0*10^7
v0 = 3.0*10^5
vee = 1.0*10^3
v - v0 = 3.0 *10^7 - 3.0*10^5 = 2.97*10^7
m = 1000 kg
I plug in these numbers and I am getting infinity. What am I doing wrong?

Thanks!
 
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The initial velocity should be 0, not 3*105 m/s.

3*105 m/s is the exhaust velocity of the hypothetical fuel, the number for chemical rockets is just given as comparison. The number will be very large, but you should't get infinity anywhere.

Please work with units, that makes it easier (especially for you) to spot mistakes.
 
mfb said:
The initial velocity should be 0, not 3*105 m/s.

3*105 m/s is the exhaust velocity of the hypothetical fuel, the number for chemical rockets is just given as comparison. The number will be very large, but you should't get infinity anywhere.

I'm confused, how is the initial velocity zero? It says that the fuel gives us a v0 of 3.0*105?

The problem is when I plug in the values of the conditions into my final equation, (equation 2).
 
Based on your formulas, m0 calculates to (1000 kg)*e^29700, which is approx 3.5 x 10^12901 (not infinity), but too large for your calculator.
 
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scottdave said:
Based on your formulas, m0 calculates to (1000 kg)*e^29700, which is approx 3.5 x 10^12901 (not infinity), but too large for your calculator.
Thank you!
 
Dopplershift said:
how is the initial velocity zero? It says that the fuel gives us a v0 of 3.0*105?
If that v0 is the initial speed of the rocket then the question makes no sense. How can the fuel give it that initial speed, before any fuel is burnt? I believe v0 is the exhaust speed, and the question is saying that although a typical exhaust speed is only 1000m/s, just suppose we had one with an exhaust speed 300 times as great.
 
haruspex said:
If that v0 is the initial speed of the rocket then the question makes no sense. How can the fuel give it that initial speed, before any fuel is burnt? I believe v0 is the exhaust speed, and the question is saying that although a typical exhaust speed is only 1000m/s, just suppose we had one with an exhaust speed 300 times as great.
That is how I interpreted the question as well.
 
Dopplershift said:
Thank you!
In perspective, the mass of the Earth is 5.97 x 10^24 kg.
 
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Dopplershift said:
The problem states:
Typical chemical fuels yield exhaust speeds of the order of 103 m/s. Let us imagine we had a fuel that gives v0 = 3 × 105 m/s. What initial mass of fuel would the rocket need in order to attain a final velocity of 0.1c for a final mass of 1 ton?

I derived the equation in the first part of the problem:
\begin{equation}
v - v_0 = v_e \ln(\frac{m_0}{m})
\end{equation}

Solving for the initial mass, m, yields
\begin{equation}
m_0 = me^{\frac{\Delta v}{v_e)}}
\end{equation}

I plug in that.

0.1c = 3.0*10^7
v0 = 3.0*10^5
vee = 1.0*10^3
v - v0 = 3.0 *10^7 - 3.0*10^5 = 2.97*10^7
m = 1000 kg
I plug in these numbers and I am getting infinity. What am I doing wrong?

Thanks!

Your use of ##v_0## is inconsistent: in the rocket equation, ##v_0=## initial speed of the rocket, That is ##v_0 = 0## nowhere near ##3 \times 10^5## (m/s). The "speed" ##3 \times 10^5## (m/s) is the speed of the exhaust gas relative to the rocket body.

One final quibble: the rocket equation as you wrote it is for non-relativistic rockets, using classical mechanics and Newton's equations of motion. The final speed ##0.1 c## sought in this problem is getting a bit into territory where relativity matters, so in pirnciple one ought to use a relativistic version of the rocket eqution. Of course, it will make very little difference in this particular problem---but it is always a good idea to know what kinds of approximations you are using.
 
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This problem is from May, it is unlikely that someone is still working on it.
 

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