launch vehicles and orbits

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Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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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

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Page 1: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Page 2: 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

Page 3: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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.

Page 4: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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)

Page 5: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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).

Page 6: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Conservation of Momentum

Page 7: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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.)

Page 8: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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.

Page 9: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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!

Page 10: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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

Page 11: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Newton’s Mountain

Page 12: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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)

Page 13: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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

Page 14: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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

Page 15: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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

Page 16: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Precession

Page 17: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Precession

Page 18: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Precession

Page 19: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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

Page 20: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Robert Goddard -

First Liquid-Fuel

Rocket, 1926

Page 21: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

The V-1

Page 22: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

The V-2

Page 23: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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

Page 24: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Sputnik I

• October 4, 1957• S- (with) +

put’ (path) +-nik (one who) =Sputnik

• Literally, one who follows the same path

Page 25: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Early Rockets, Kennedy Space Center

Page 26: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Early Rockets, Huntsville AL

Page 27: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

V-2 Huntsville AL

Page 28: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

V-2 shrapnel

Page 29: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

V-2 Components

Page 30: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Gemini, 1965

Page 31: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Sensor Technology• Passive (senses only ambient signals)• Active (emits signals)

• Imaging• Non-Imaging

• Scanning (mechanical or electronic)• Non-scanning

Page 32: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

The Single Most

Valuable Product of the Space Program

Page 33: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Crescent Earth

Page 34: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Himalayas from Space Shuttle

Page 35: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Volcano, Alaska

Page 36: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Fringing Reefs

Page 37: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Icebergs, Antarctica

Page 38: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

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

Page 39: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

“You Can’t See Borders From Space”

Page 40: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Mexican Border

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Mexican Border

Page 42: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Menominee County, WI

Page 43: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

U.S.-Canadian Border

Page 44: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Landsat View of

Green Bay

Page 45: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Landsat View of Green Bay

Page 46: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Landsat view of

Washington D.C.

Page 47: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Radar Image of New York

City

Page 48: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Spy Satellite Views of Soviet Aircraft Carrier

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Page 50: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Spy Satellite View of Soviet Airfield

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World Trade Center, September 11, 2001

Page 54: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Pope John Paul II Funeral

Page 55: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Pope John Paul II Funeral

Page 56: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Barack Obama’s Inauguration

Page 57: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Barack Obama’s

Inauguration

Page 58: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

And Now For Something Completely Different….

Page 59: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Gulf Stream in Infrared

Page 60: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Ultraviolet View of Earth

Page 61: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

The Ocean Floor From Space

Page 62: Launch Vehicles and Orbits

Earth and Moon Together

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Really Remote Sensing

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An Eclipse of the Sun – By Earth