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New Molecule Could Lead To Better Rocket Fuel

MithrandirAgain writes "Trinitramid is the name of the new molecule that may be a component in future rocket fuel. This fuel could be 20 to 30 percent more efficient in comparison with the best rocket fuels available today, according to researchers (abstract). The discovery was made at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Sweden. 'A rule of thumb is that for every ten-percent increase in efficiency for rocket fuel, the payload of the rocket can double. What's more, the molecule consists only of nitrogen and oxygen, which would make the rocket fuel environmentally friendly. This is more than can be said of today's solid rocket fuels, which entail the emission of the equivalent of 550 tons of concentrated hydrochloric acid for each launch of the space shuttle,' says Tore Brinck, professor of physical chemistry at KTH."

121 comments

  1. Premature Celebration by glueball · · Score: 5, Informative

    From TFA:
    "It remains to be seen how stable the molecule is in a solid form," says Tore Brinck.

    And until then, this is a premature press release to be criticising the shape shuttle solid rockets.

    Someone must need to re-up on their grant.

    1. Re:Premature Celebration by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      The scientists have also managed to produce enough of the compound in a test tube for it to be detectable.

      Yes, I would have to agree that they're jumping the boat a tad. A long ways to go to fill up a rocket.

      But the name is way cool. Kudos to the marketing team!

      --
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    2. Re:Premature Celebration by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      Most modern solid-fuel rockets use pretty much the same fuel as the shuttle SRBs. It's cheap, stable and reliable but it does produce a lot of goop and the ISP could be better. If this stuff is stable it might make an excellent replacement for ammonium perchlorate oxidizer.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    3. Re:Premature Celebration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is a Swedish after all. Those guys can make things stable.

    4. Re:Premature Celebration by Zot+Quixote · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'm not sure I really understand the idea behind purposed research. I mean, I guess you can focus on the problem you're trying to solve, but isn't this more of an engineering issue than a research problem?

    5. Re:Premature Celebration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It remains to be seen how stable the molecule is in a solid form,"

      Well, sound of "TriNitr-something" kind of promises stability, doesn't it?

      Just kidding, ... historically, compared to other Nitro explosives, TNT proved quite forgiving.

    6. Re:Premature Celebration by PieSquared · · Score: 1

      It does seem a bit early to be proclaiming this molecule as a new rocket fuel, but it's never too early to criticize the shuttle's SRB's. Not only are they ridiculously expensive and horrible for the environment, but they're terribly unsafe. Seriously, the reason why the shuttle has to be assembled vertically and towed by a huge and expensive piece of custom machinery to the launchpad is because otherwise the SRB's will probably explode.

      Now at this point you might speculate that the SRB's are esential to manned spaceflight, but you'd be wrong. SpaceX just launched its eventually-human-carrying Dragon spacecraft using only liquid fuel. So then why do all the proposals for NASA's shuttle replacement have SRB's in them? Because they are *so* expensive that it's politically impossible to lose the shuttle without another use for SRB's.

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    7. Re:Premature Celebration by espiesp · · Score: 1

      Hey now, don't forget the Saturn V rocket either. That mother could haul some mail. With an awesome service record to boot.

  2. Hydrochloric acid? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can anyone explain this? I thought the space shuttle lifted off on hydrogen and oxygen. If the fuel is hydrogen and oxygen, the hydrochloric acid doesn't come from the fuel. What am I missing here? How would replacing hydrogen and oxygen with a new fuel that contains a new molecule be more environmentally friendly? How do we know that the properties of this molecule and the exhaust caused by it don't cause more environmental trouble than the exhaust of hydrogen and oxygen? Has anyone tested it?

    1. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by RobertLTux · · Score: 3, Informative

      in small words the shuttle has 2 systems pushing it into orbit

      1 the huge tank thing and the jets on the tail of the shuttle
      2 those skinny rockets on either side of the huge tank thing

      the huge one is hydrogen/oxygen the others are a solid rocket booster (btw thats where the name SRB comes from)
      the SRB is just like a model rocket only bigger LOTS BIGGER and this is the fuel being replaced

      (note for actual rocket scientists this is the post-it(tm) version so the details are a bit fuzzy)

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    2. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by tekrat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In even smaller words: Nothing you said addresses the parent posts questions.

      --
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    3. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by Ellis+D.+Tripp · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is a potential replacement for the fuel used in the solid rocket boosters, not the main engines.

      While the main engine burn LH2 and LOX, emitting nothing but steam, the SRBs burn a rubbery mix of ammonium perchlorate, powdered aluminum and a polymer binder. They emit a pretty nasty exhaust stream, containing hydrogen chloride and aluminum oxide, among many other compounds.

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    4. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Forget the HCL. Nitrogen oxides in the air are not "environmentally friendly".

    5. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by ohiovr · · Score: 1

      Merry Christmas!

    6. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      The SRB makes the hydrochloric acid. The main tank does not.

    7. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 3, Informative

      LH2/LOX engines will perform better than this new compound no matter what. The only way to get better performance than LH2/LOX (for a chemical rocket) is to change the oxidizer.... maybe liquid ozone... or Fluorine. Fluorine is the best oxidizer you can get. Problem is that it tends to oxidize its container and then oxidize you.... nasty, nasty stuff.

      --
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    8. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by Ellis+D.+Tripp · · Score: 2

      No doubt that these improved solid rockets would still be inferior to LH2/LOX liquids, but still a significant improvement to current solid rocket technology. Solids have the advantage of storability and simplicity of construction/low cost. They will continue to have wide application for the foreseeable future.

      If you are interested in reading some stories about really exotic fuels/oxidizers, check out the book "Ignition!" by John D. Clark. Chlorine Trifluoride, anyone?

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    9. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by MurphyZero · · Score: 1

      The LH2 by itself is the best fuel by Isp, but it comes at the price of enlarged tanks to hold it. There are some other fuels that provide a slightly better comparison based on dry mass for tanking and engine and such. LH2/LO2 technology is pretty well understood and fairly reliable but cryogenics provide other problems. The right choice of propellant depends on the tradeoffs.

      --
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    10. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm tired of hearing idiots complain about Hydrochloric acid like it's some horrible environmental toxin like dioxin.

      Once you dilute hydrochloric acid, it's harmless. Your stomach produces hydrochloric acid. Low concentrations of HCl are used in medicines to properly balance the pH. Look at how many medicines, including eye drops contain "activeingredient HCl."

      Just don't set off a solid fuel rocket indoors or stand in the exhaust plume and the HCl won't bother you. Of course, there may be other things there that will kill you even in small concentrations.

    11. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by careysub · · Score: 1

      Can anyone explain this? I thought the space shuttle lifted off on hydrogen and oxygen. If the fuel is hydrogen and oxygen, the hydrochloric acid doesn't come from the fuel. What am I missing here? How would replacing hydrogen and oxygen with a new fuel that contains a new molecule be more environmentally friendly? How do we know that the properties of this molecule and the exhaust caused by it don't cause more environmental trouble than the exhaust of hydrogen and oxygen? Has anyone tested it?

      Two Solid Rocket Boosters (SRBs) help get the shuttle off the pad (and a joint failure in one of these destroyed the Challenger, killing seven astronauts). The SRBs burn synthetic rubber as fuel and ammonium perchlorate is the oxidizer. When ammonium perchlorate burns the chlorine emerges as HCl.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    12. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by Kagura · · Score: 1

      Chlorine Trifluoride, anyone?

      Chlorine trifluoride is the worst chemical I have ever heard of. Does anybody know something more corrosive and hazardous?

    13. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by arisvega · · Score: 1

      In even smaller words: Nothing you said addresses the parent posts questions.

      C'mon, the answer is there, hard to miss. It's not like it's rocket science!

      --
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    14. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      LH2 is the best thermal nozzle working fluid. You still need something to heat it up.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    15. Re:Hydrochloric acid? by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      HF is a nasty toxic acid. That's the main reason we don't use Fluorine. In fact they tested Li,F,H rocket that has more than 20% performance boost over H2 O2. But the problems of dealing with liquid metal and Florine along with massive plumes of toxic exhaust means its just not worth it. Its cheaper to build the rocket 2-3x bigger.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
  3. 20-30% more efficient solid rocket fuel by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 4, Informative

    The key part being "solid". Solid rocket fuels are notoriously inefficient compared to liquid fuels.

    From the sounds of this stuff, assuming that 20-30% is closer to 30% than to 20%, we're talking roughly 75% as efficient as Hydrogen, and somewhat less efficient still than kerosene...

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    1. Re:20-30% more efficient solid rocket fuel by John+Hasler · · Score: 2

      > Solid rocket fuels are notoriously inefficient compared to liquid fuels.

      They are also notoriously simple and inexpensive.

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    2. Re:20-30% more efficient solid rocket fuel by 0123456 · · Score: 3, Informative

      They are also notoriously simple and inexpensive.

      The LOX/LH2 in the shuttle's external tank costs far less than the two SRBs on the side. It's the liquid-fuelled engines that are expensive, if you throw them away after each flight.

    3. Re:20-30% more efficient solid rocket fuel by GigsVT · · Score: 2

      So far, recycling equipment has been a fool's errand.

      The great experiment in reusable space craft turned out to be a massive money hole, holding back space exploration to a large extent.

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    4. Re:20-30% more efficient solid rocket fuel by AJWM · · Score: 2

      The great experiment in reusable space craft turned out to be a massive money hole

      Oh? Has anyone actually tried that experiment yet?

      And no, Shuttle doesn't count: the external tanks are thrown away, the SRB's are more crash'n'salvage than reusable (take a look at what actually gets reused), and the Orbiter undergoes a major overhaul after every mission.

      There have been experimental prototypes of reusable vehicles. DC-X for example, which demonstrated successful intact launch-abort capability as well as rapid turnaround (two launches within 24 hours), but (being a test bed) was not designed to reach orbit.

      And don't talk to me about X-33; that was a boondoggle from the start, and many of us said so.

      --
      -- Alastair
    5. Re:20-30% more efficient solid rocket fuel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, that's why SpaceX doesn't use any. They're all about running up excessive expenses and needlessly complicating things.

      No wait, I mean NASA uses them because of political pressure, and they're horribly expensive and notoriously unstable (and I mean compared to sitting on a hundred tons of liquid hydrogen and oxygen).

    6. Re:20-30% more efficient solid rocket fuel by KZigurs · · Score: 1

      I think that was exactly the parents point. Shuttle was initially sold as reusable platform that will be oh so cheap once you'll average the initial cost over the projected lifetime.

      Didn't turn out that way.

  4. New molecule? by gmuslera · · Score: 4, Funny

    I tought that the revolutionary molecule that would help with rocket propulsion would be thiotimoline

    1. Re:New molecule? by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      Probably. But so far we couldn't find that past component of it, maybe in the future we will.

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    2. Re:New molecule? by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Since we have over 150,000 years experience with tylium, the human race doesn't need that thiotimoline crap.

  5. Solid rockets by rossdee · · Score: 1

    Are best confined to July 4th and November 5th.

    The big drawback is that once they're lit you have no control, you can't turn them off, or even throttle them down.

    1. Re:Solid rockets by mangu · · Score: 2

      The big drawback is that once they're lit you have no control, you can't turn them off, or even throttle them down.

      Something I've always wondered, if one of the shuttle's SRBs fails to lit and the other one starts up, what happens?

    2. Re:Solid rockets by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A quick google search and voilà!

      More advanced solid rocket motors can not only be throttled but also be extinguished and then re-ignited by controlling the nozzle geometry or through the use of vent ports.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    3. Re:Solid rockets by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      The spacecraft is clamped down until all engines are up to full power.

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      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    4. Re:Solid rockets by realxmp · · Score: 2

      The big drawback is that once they're lit you have no control, you can't turn them off, or even throttle them down.

      Something I've always wondered, if one of the shuttle's SRBs fails to lit and the other one starts up, what happens?

      Even though you can't turn off the booster you can detach it and use the range safety device to self destruct it. Have a look at "Space Shuttle Abort Modes" on Wikipedia.

    5. Re:Solid rockets by Muad'Dave · · Score: 2

      That's true of the main engines, but not the solids. The explosive bolts holding the shuttle to the pad are fired before the SRBs are lit.

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    6. Re:Solid rockets by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      I recall there being a Range Safety system that can be fired to split the SRB open, releasing the pressure. Odds are the RSO wouldn't be able to fire the charges in the 100 mS it takes to exceed load limits due to an asymmetrical SRB firing.

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    7. Re:Solid rockets by Ellis+D.+Tripp · · Score: 3, Informative

      And the hold-down bolts are designed so that the thrust from the SRB would cause them to stretch and break loose, even if the pyrotechnic fasteners never fired.

      To answer the original question, a launch where only one SRB fired would be an unsurvivable disaster. The asymmetric thrust would cause the shuttle to cartwheel into either the launch tower or the surrounding area.

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    8. Re:Solid rockets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like a thermal curtain failure! Haven't you watched space camp?

    9. Re:Solid rockets by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Something I've always wondered, if one of the shuttle's SRBs fails to lit and the other one starts up, what happens?

      Everyone dies. And the launch pad is probably destroyed.

      This is why the SRBs have multiple (three I think) independent igniters so that only an extremely unlikely failure could make them not ignite.

    10. Re:Solid rockets by 0123456 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Odds are the RSO wouldn't be able to fire the charges in the 100 mS it takes to exceed load limits due to an asymmetrical SRB firing.

      Doesn't really matter, because everyone dies either way: the shuttle will crash and burn if it's on the pad with one SRB missing. All you have to do is ensure you destroy the SRB before it goes flying off across Florida and crashes into a bus full of nuns and orphans on their way to Disneyland.

    11. Re:Solid rockets by MachDelta · · Score: 2

      Funny, a different article on wikipedia (Space Shuttle Abort Modes) claims that: "The SRBs cannot be turned off once ignited, and afterwards the shuttle is committed to take off. "

      Wikipedia is contradicting itself? Noooooooooo!! *headasplode*

    12. Re:Solid rockets by John+Hasler · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > Wikipedia is contradicting itself?

      No. There are extinguishable solid-fuel rockets. The shuttle SRBs are not among them.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    13. Re:Solid rockets by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      Thank you for the correction.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    14. Re:Solid rockets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All you have to do is ensure you destroy the SRB before it goes flying off across Florida and crashes into a bus full of nuns and orphans on their way to Disneyland.

      I would suggest they take an airplane, that's one hell of a long trip in a bus.

    15. Re:Solid rockets by MurphyZero · · Score: 1

      I thought all the extinguishable solid rocket motors were the hybrids-a solid propellant ignited by a liquid/gaseous oxidizer. Stop the flow of the oxidizer and the engine turns off. Hybrids are usually not grouped with pure solids. Most (or all I believe) solid propellants in use today mix and the fuel and oxidizer and just require an ignition source and then it is a self-sustaining operation,at least inside the rockets itself, which is why they can not be turned off.

      --
      Our founding fathers removed the guys in charge. Be American. Vote incumbents out.
    16. Re:Solid rockets by Yetihehe · · Score: 1

      Advanced solid fuels may not burn good at standard pressure, but burn at working pressure. So when your engine has only one small nozzle, pressure builds up and engine works. When you open additional ports in engine bottom, pressure drops and fuel stops burning.

      --
      Extreme Programming - Redundant Array of Inexpensive Developers
    17. Re:Solid rockets by Titoxd · · Score: 0

      The big drawback is that once they're lit you have no control, you can't turn them off, or even throttle them down.

      Something I've always wondered, if one of the shuttle's SRBs fails to lit and the other one starts up, what happens?

      At that point, you're fucked...

    18. Re:Solid rockets by mbessey · · Score: 1

      Restricting the nozzle of a solid rocket usually causes it to explode, so maybe you could "throttle" it by opening the nozzle, to reduce the burn rate. You might even be able to get it to blow itself out that way, I suppose.

    19. Re:Solid rockets by dtmos · · Score: 1

      You mean Disneyworld. It's the guys at Vandenberg that have to avoid the nuns and orphans on their way to Disneyland (still no picnic).

  6. Redeeculous by Ancient_Hacker · · Score: 5, Informative

    Rocket fuel was a big research area in the 1950's. Dozens of very good chemists spent a whole load (hundreds of millions of 1950-size dollars) trying to make better rocket fuels.

    ( One of them wrote a informative and funny book about that time and place ).

    The short summary is: Yes, you can make higher oomph rocket fuels and oxidizers with more oxygen in them.

    But a lot of the formulas are impractical as:

    (0) They were already discovered years ago, and discarded, but chemists don't like to write up their failures, and researchers don't like to read old moldy research summaries anyway.

    (1) They're waaay too expensive to make, even for military uses.

    (2) They are highly toxic, even more toxic than the widely-used hydrazines, which can kill you in several interesting ways.

    (3) They're so unstable, you have to keep them under impossible conditions, like no sound, no vibrations, no light, and under a part per million of crud in the perfectly-smooth and unscratched nickel-plated tanks.

    (4) They can't be stored for more than a day or so before the fuel or oxidizer starts decomposing itself or the tank walls.

    (5) Too many of the researchers were vaporized while handling the stuff. Literally. Truly. Completely. That tends to make it hard to find substitute researchers to continue working with the same stuff.

    (6) For military applications, you need a fuel that can be handled by raw recruits, stored for many months, be pumped quickly into not always totally clean rocket tanks, kept in those loaded rockets for days to months, and tolerate wide temperature swings. These requirements alone disqualify a large percentage of really zippy fuels and oxidizers.

    The odds are pretty high against this "new" compound being all that new, or it passing the basic requirements for fuel or oxidizer.

    1. Re:Redeeculous by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      (3) They're so unstable, you have to keep them under impossible conditions, like no sound, no vibrations, no light, and under a part per million of crud in the perfectly-smooth and unscratched nickel-plated tanks.

      If you manage to create these conditions, I'm sure a lot of husbands will pay good money to have their wifes stored under such conditions during their PMS days.

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    2. Re:Redeeculous by randyjparker · · Score: 1

      Please name the book & author. I grew up in Huntsville then and would like to get it for my PhD dad, who spent most of his career in rocket fuel oxidizers

    3. Re:Redeeculous by Muad'Dave · · Score: 3, Interesting

      (2) They are highly toxic, even more toxic than the widely-used hydrazines, which can kill you in several interesting ways.

      (3) They're so unstable, you have to keep them under impossible conditions

      That reminds me of a hazmat situation involving pentaborane that happened in the 80's near me. One of my best friends as exposed, died and was resuscitated several times. He suffered organ damage and lost many of his early memories.

      See also: http://www.scribd.com/doc/15062569/Pentaborane-Taming-the-Dragonpdf

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    4. Re:Redeeculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ignition!: An informal history of liquid rocket propellants
      John D Clark, Rutgers University Press, 1972, ISBN-10: 0813507251

      If your dad worked in oxidizers, he likely knows of this book.

      http://www.amazon.com/Ignition-informal-history-liquid-propellants/dp/0813507251
      Amazing book, some of the funniest science stories I have seen published (destroyer parts and bats!, boron!, etc...) - Any scientist would appreciate this.
      Sadly, it is out of print, and copies run up to $200. I got it from my university library and scanned the whole thing.
      You can order reprints from online sources.

    5. Re:Redeeculous by randyjparker · · Score: 1

      ebay has Dr. Clark's copy from $250. Amazon is $200 - $600. The online availability of a $72 microfilm version from UMI has been terminated. Only 2,000 copies were printed, and the Atlanta library system has zero. If anyone has any ideas how I can get one, please email me directly at randy.j.parker@gmail.com My dad is still lucid at 91, and would enjoy this for Christmas! During WWII he developed shaped charges for the Army with George Kistiakowsy in Pittsburgh, before Kistiakowsky got "drafted" by the Manhattan Project. Werner Von Braun used to live 2 doors down when I was a toddler, and his niece was a baby sitter for our family.

    6. Re:Redeeculous by Soylent+Beige · · Score: 3, Informative
      --
      Everyone hates me because I'm paranoid.
    7. Re:Redeeculous by joe_frisch · · Score: 4, Informative

      Agreed. If you want really high specific impulse fuel, then mono-atomic hydrogen, or possibly metallic hydrogen have fantastic theoretical performance. Atomic hydrogen can be easily produced (as a very low density gas), the "only" problem is stabilising it as a liquid or solid.

      In reality the problem with launching to orbit is cost, and that cost is NOT dominated by fuel. As a rough estimate a saturn V used 1 million gallons of kerosine ($5M), to put 200K pounds in orbit. That is ~$25/pound. Whatever is the driving cost in space travel, it is not the cost of the fuel.

      ---Joe Frisch

    8. Re:Redeeculous by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > Whatever is the driving cost in space travel, it is not the cost of the fuel.

      No, it's the cost of the rocket. And cryogenic turbopumps are very expensive.

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    9. Re:Redeeculous by Midnight+Warrior · · Score: 1

      Interesting. What was the author and title of the book, or as much as you remember? Thanks!

  7. Big deal by OneAhead · · Score: 5, Informative

    Over the decades, chemists have come up with dozens of molecular structures that would make "the perfect rocket fuel" or "the perfect explosive" (both qualities are closely related). If only they would be stable enough to prevent accidental explosions ("It remains to be seen how stable the molecule is in a solid form"). And be possible to produce in hundreds of tons ("The scientists have also managed to produce enough of the compound in a test tube for it to be detectable.") And most important of all, cheap enough to compete with existing propellants.
    Until these problems can be addressed, this "breakthrough" is just another octanitrocubane
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octanitrocubane
    It's a chemical tour-de-force to synthesize difficult structures like this in the first place, and in that sense, the researchers may have made a valuable contribution to the field of synthetic chemistry, but if you expect rockets with quadruple payloads based on this molecule to be lifting of by 2015, well, don't hold your breath.

    See also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2,4,6-Tris(trinitromethyl)-1,3,5-triazine

    1. Re:Big deal by OneAhead · · Score: 1

      I'd like to add that the chemical structure looks more like a potential high-explosive than a potential rocket fuel (but then again, these things are difficult to predict). Moreover, high explosives for specialized purposes do not need to be available/affordable in such high amounts as rocket fuels (but they generally do require a better shelf life, which might be an issue).

    2. Re:Big deal by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Until these problems can be addressed, this "breakthrough" is just another octanitrocubane.

      Awww, shucks. You beat me to it.

      But ONC looks fun to a symmetry-phile, and TNA has a similar appeal.

      I wonder what their co-polymer would look like? Hopefully, like a hole in the lab bench.

      Hmmm, by analogy with Arsenic and Phosphorus, one might hope for a N4 entity. One might also hope that, since hydrazine is so well known as a substitute for water when washing skin too delicate to take DHMO, then analogously N4H4 might have ... vigorous ... behaviour. Substituting (nitrating), then N4(NO2)4 would be ... good for manufacturers of lab benches and fume cupboards. And blast walls.

      Almost makes chemistry attractive again. Stuff those biochemists and their tedious jellyfish-based sludge - we want proper chemistry : bangs, flashes and bad smells!

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  8. You're missing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ammonium perchlorate in the SRBs.

  9. A long shot by hankwang · · Score: 3, Interesting
    They synthesized something enough to see it in a mass spectrometer. Note that mass spectrometers need less than a nanomol or so (0.1 micrograms), and the compound was probably in a solution, mixed with a lot of other compounds.

    Then it is being speculated that (a) the synthesis can be scaled up to produce a few hundred tonnes in a cost-effective way, (b) the stuff is stable enough to not decompose explosively if you shake it too hard, and (c) can be burnt in a controlled way to make it suitable as a rocket fuel.

    A long shot. Unfortunately, it seems to be necessary nowadays to speculate about far-fetched applications in fundamental research, since the fact that a new compound consisting of just 4 nitrogen and 6 oxygen atoms is synthesized that has never been seen before, is not considered to be interesting by itself.

  10. Mythbusters? by clyde_cadiddlehopper · · Score: 1

    Time for Jamie and Adam to get busy on this rumor. Bwahahahaha.

    --
    Obi-Wan: "I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were sudden
    1. Re:Mythbusters? by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      Screw Jamie and Adam, this myth needs more Kari Byron

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
    2. Re:Mythbusters? by imikem · · Score: 2

      Suit yourself, but I'd rather screw Kari Byron. Speaking of myths...

      --
      Perscriptio in manibus tabellariorum est.
  11. No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by damburger · · Score: 4, Interesting

    By the rocket equation, mass fraction is determined by velocity and exhaust velocity is driven two things; the mass of the molecules being put out and the pressure/temperature of the combustion chamber. The latter is limited, as once you get to about 100 atmospheres and 3000K you start to run out of materials to make the combustion chamber out of. Thus, molecule mass is the real driving factor - which is why despite the truly horrific engineering problems it entails, liquid hydrogen is a highly valued rocket fuel.

    In fact, because molecular mass is so important, H2/O2 rockets are run fuel rich, sacrificing some combustion efficiency in order to leave some unburned hydrogen in the exhaust and reduce its average molecular mass.

    So it doesn't matter how much energy you can get out of this new compound. It will only spit out oxygen, nitrogen and nitrous oxides, all far more massive than the hydrogen and water vapour you get from rockets in use at the moment. Sure, breaking down this molecule in optimal conditions might yield enough energy that the reaction products would have more velocity than the exhaust of a H2/O2 rocket, but there is a reason chemists don't build rockets; these researchers aren't taking into account the kind of unobtanium combustion chamber walls you would need to utilise such an inferno.

    --
    If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    1. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      So it doesn't matter how much energy you can get out of this new compound. It will only spit out oxygen, nitrogen and nitrous oxides, all far more massive than the hydrogen and water vapour you get from rockets in use at the moment.

      Many of the "rockets in use at the moment" use fuels other than hydrogen and oxygen and many are solid fuel.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    2. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by damburger · · Score: 1

      And none of those other fuels has better performance that H2/O2, so whats your point?

      The are three reasons why other fuels get used at all:

      1. Lack of technology to handle liquid hydrogen

      2. Need for a rocket (or more usually a missile) to loiter

      3. Additional acceleration during the launch phase

      1 and 2 don't apply any more to new rocket development, since even Russia and China can now handle LH2 and have stopped directly deriving their launchers from missiles. With 3 chamber pressure and temperature are again limiting factors and thus some new super-compound with massive energy density doesn't help. There is a reason they don't use TNT as rocket fuel, you know.

      Oh, sorry, you were just making an inane nitpick. I thought for a second you might actually know what you are talking about, but then again this is /.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    3. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by John+Hasler · · Score: 4, Informative

      And none of those other fuels has better performance that H2/O2, so whats your point?

      The solid/liquid decision and the choice of fuel is a complex engineering process involving much more than picking the one with the highest ISP.

      BTW lithium-flourine-hydrogen tripropellent has an ISP of 542, versus 455 for hydrogen-oxygen. By your reasoning everyone should be using it, but in fact it has never been used.

      There is a reason they don't use TNT as rocket fuel, you know.

      Nitrogycerin mixed with nitrocellulose was used in the past, but theoretical ISP is not the only consideration. Which is my point.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    4. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by MurphyZero · · Score: 1

      I'd mod you up if I didn't already make other comments.

      --
      Our founding fathers removed the guys in charge. Be American. Vote incumbents out.
    5. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by Mandrel · · Score: 1

      By the rocket equation, mass fraction is determined by velocity and exhaust velocity is driven two things; the mass of the molecules being put out and the pressure/temperature of the combustion chamber.

      A rocket goes up because of the asymmetry between molecules being flung against the top of the reaction chamber while passing out the bottom. I know that the chaos in the chamber means that the best way to think about this is a pressure parameter rather than the direction of individual molecules. But I've always wanted to know whether you could make a rocket engine more efficient by using electromagnetic fields to orient the molecules in such a way that the chemical reactions are biased to have more reaction products being flung up and down rather than side to side.

      Taking the H2+O2 reaction as an example: The reaction proceeds in a complex way, however magnetic fields are able to affect similar reactions.

    6. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by careysub · · Score: 2

      By the rocket equation, mass fraction is determined by velocity and exhaust velocity is driven two things; the mass of the molecules being put out and the pressure/temperature of the combustion chamber. The latter is limited, as once you get to about 100 atmospheres and 3000K you start to run out of materials to make the combustion chamber out of. Thus, molecule mass is the real driving factor - which is why despite the truly horrific engineering problems it entails, liquid hydrogen is a highly valued rocket fuel.

      In fact, because molecular mass is so important, H2/O2 rockets are run fuel rich, sacrificing some combustion efficiency in order to leave some unburned hydrogen in the exhaust and reduce its average molecular mass.

      ...

      Similarly the Germans improved the performance of the alcohol-LOX fueled V2 by adding inert water to the alcohol. By reducing the average molecular weight of the exhaust it improved the thrust even though it reduced the energy in the fuel.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    7. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by damburger · · Score: 1

      I don't think that would help. The component of molecular motion perpendicular to axis of the rocket is fairly efficiently converted into momentum parallel to the axis by interaction with the nozzle. There is an 'escape cone' of molecules that don't have enough parallel momentum to actually leave the chamber at all, but they would scatter quickly into part of the momentum space that lets them.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    8. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by damburger · · Score: 1

      Not sure that was the intention actually; the main reason was that 1940s engineering couldn't build a combustion chamber that could withstand the heat of reaction between pure alcohol and LOx, and diluting the alcohol lowered the temperature (The actual chamber they used on the V2 was a massive, seat-of-the-pants, fudge anyhow). Lowering the carbon content of the fuel will have improved Isp certainly, but I don't believe that is why they made the choice.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    9. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by damburger · · Score: 1

      I never said specific impulse was the only choice. And if people thought they could handle Li-F-LH2 tripropellant they would, but nobody can so they don't. Not at all inconsistent with what I said.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    10. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by Drishmung · · Score: 1

      By the rocket equation, mass fraction is determined by velocity and exhaust velocity is driven two things; the mass of the molecules being put out and the pressure/temperature of the combustion chamber. The latter is limited, as once you get to about 100 atmospheres and 3000K you start to run out of materials to make the combustion chamber out of. Thus, molecule mass is the real driving factor - which is why despite the truly horrific engineering problems it entails, liquid hydrogen is a highly valued rocket fuel.

      At one stage apparently, they looked at Hydogen + Flourine. Most exothermic binary reactiion known? Check. Satisfactorily low reaction mass? Check.

      Of course, quite apart from the horrific problems of dealing with liquid Flourine, the issue of that light reaction mass product, and its somewhat unfriendly characteristics led to it being abandoned.

      --
      Protoplasm. Quiet Protoplasm. I like quiet protoplasm.
    11. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by Drishmung · · Score: 1

      Damn. My spell check appears to have achieved malevolent sentience. s/Flourine/Fluorine/g.

      --
      Protoplasm. Quiet Protoplasm. I like quiet protoplasm.
    12. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by careysub · · Score: 1

      Not sure that was the intention actually; the main reason was that 1940s engineering couldn't build a combustion chamber that could withstand the heat of reaction between pure alcohol and LOx, and diluting the alcohol lowered the temperature (The actual chamber they used on the V2 was a massive, seat-of-the-pants, fudge anyhow). Lowering the carbon content of the fuel will have improved Isp certainly, but I don't believe that is why they made the choice.

      "Rockets, Missiles, and Men in Space" by Willy Ley, 1968, p. 598:

      "The fuel of the V-2 was ordinary ethyl alcohol... to which enough water had been added to bring its strength down to 75 percent by volume. The reason for the addition of the water was the following: ... The combustion products of burning ethyl alcohol are CO2 and H2O, and of course the CO2 molecule is by far the heavier. By adding water to the alcohol the proportion of water molecules in the exhaust is increased and its molecular weight depressed. This addition also decreases the temperature but at a lesser rate. The mixture ratio used is the optimal mixture for this purpose."

      According to Ley the alcohol water mixture is optimized for the maximum thrust with the temperature reduction an additional benefit. The reduction is temperature is only 160 K, not a make-or-break for the combustion chamber design, but any thrust enhancement increases the weight of payload hitting the target disproportionately. The V-2 combustion chamber was a break-through design using active cooling (both regenerative and film) - it basically invented liquid fuel rocketry as we know it - and with it handling the high temperature of combustion was a solved problem. Reducing the temperature gives you more leeway in you design space which is good - but they did not need the reduction to make a working V-2.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    13. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by Billy+the+Mountain · · Score: 1

      They probably wouldn't need a warhead, just make sure there's enough unspent fuel remaining. The explosion conflagration? Don't know the yield of that but HF is pretty lethal in minute amounts.

      --
      That was the turning point of my life--I went from negative zero to positive zero.
    14. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by Billy+the+Mountain · · Score: 1

      Well, you know Flourine = resembling flowers!

      --
      That was the turning point of my life--I went from negative zero to positive zero.
    15. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a fourth reason against H2 as a fuel in the first stage of a rocket: Volume. A H2 tank for some delta V needs to be much larger than a tank for the equivalent amount of kerosene. Oh, and a fifth reason: The H2 tank needs to be well insulated, since the liquid H2 needs to stay cold while the rocket sits on the launchpad, which adds even more weight. All this makes H2/O2 a difficult and expensive proposition, at least for the first stage. The reduced weight is actually worth the engineering and operational expenses for any upper stages.

    16. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by Mandrel · · Score: 1

      Ah OK, thanks.

      I'm hung up on conservation of momentum issues, when it may not apply (inelastic collisions?).

      The nozzle probably works in the same way that sail shape allows a boat to beat upwind, and a wing's angle of attack generates lift.

    17. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by damburger · · Score: 1

      My mistake. Seems the main reason was exhaust velocity. However, I do recall reading about the combustion chamber issue, so even with a difference of 160K it might have been an issue.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    18. Re:No hydrogen = poor exhaust velocity by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > My spell check appears to have achieved malevolent sentience.

      So has mine, and it resides inside my head.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  12. Single-stage-to-orbit, reusable vehicles... by ferongr · · Score: 1

    ...are still some some decades, if not centuries, away. Sadly. It doesn't look like current technology can provide us with the holy grail of space exploration. This experimental fuel doesn't look like the breakthrough we need.

    1. Re:Single-stage-to-orbit, reusable vehicles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No big problems here... Any NERVA device would do just fine as a single-stage-to-orbit and reusable vehicle. Ask your government why NERVA is cancelled.

      I believe that at some point we just will have to set up some orbital facilities to produce everything we need there from metals we could mine from asteroids.

    2. Re:Single-stage-to-orbit, reusable vehicles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Uh, put down the crack pipe. There's no way to do any of what you propose. If we *did* have the energy and resources to set that up, we wouldn't need to, since, uh, we *already* have the resources.

      Metal isn't consumed you know, it just ends up in landfills. What makes you think the free market is going to overlook the tons of metal already refined and concentrated in garbage dumps? Yeah, markets will just decide to pour billions into getting ores from space... Ores that are worth dollars per ton, but you think we'll spend billions to get them?

      There's a reason Space Age delusions are decades in the past; I'll leave it as an exercise for the smart reader to figure out why.

    3. Re:Single-stage-to-orbit, reusable vehicles... by ferongr · · Score: 0

      Rare earths are not that abundant as you think, and in many cases cannot be recycled.

    4. Re:Single-stage-to-orbit, reusable vehicles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Can you imagine the cost? Be realistic. Space is dead, only a few cuckoos or eccentric millionaires still care, but realistically? Dead. Get over it.

      And unless you transmute the stuff, it's still there.

      That leaves stuff we intentionally want to transmute to get power. Well, fine, but can you imagine the sheer magnitude of the endeavor required to even begin mining other bodies? Won't happen. Ever. Forget it.

    5. Re:Single-stage-to-orbit, reusable vehicles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh wow, a real-life deluded Space Nutter!

    6. Re:Single-stage-to-orbit, reusable vehicles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not with that attitude.

  13. Pick your poison by amightywind · · Score: 1

    How is 550 tons of Hydrochloric Acid worse that 550 tons of concentrated Nitric Acid? The greenies abandoned themselves to pseudo-science and engineering long ago.

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
  14. Re:Solid rockets - Real Answer by trout007 · · Score: 0

    The signal to blow the hold down bolts and light the SRB are done only through timing. There is no check to see if both SRB's are lit before blowing the hold down bolts. So if you assume all the hold down bolts blow The stack would cart wheel either into the tower or away from the tower and kill everyone on board. If the hold down bolts didn't fire they are not strong enough to restrain the thrust from one SRB so the one that was light would rip off the pad (The skirt might give way too, I'm not sure which one is stronger). With the Other SRB clamped in it would most likely rupture the ET which connects the SRB's and one SRB would go flying away with part of the ET. The Orbiter would most likely rip off the remains of the ET and fall into the flame trench. That is why there are lots of redundancies. It is also why spaceflight is so dangerous. There are a lot of critical systems that have to work.

    --
    I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
  15. Be Fair! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't compare modern tecknology with the shuttle. It's Stone Age, a trojan horse to keep the military happy in a race they had a chance of winning.

  16. Re:Solid rockets - Real Answer by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yeah, basically. However SRMs are incredibly reliable in terms of lighting off. They are crap in many other respects, but I can't think of an instance where a vehicle launched from a pad like the shuttle had an ignition failure in an SRB.

    Basically the drill is at T - 6 the SSMEs start. At that point it is still possible to abort. Once all 3 SSMEs are running at full power the clock hits 0, something like 6 pyro igniters in each SRM fires them up, and then maybe 500ms later the hold down bolts blow.

    As for range safety, the RSO is basically 'finger on button' during launch. It probably would take a half a second or something to flip up the cap and push the button. There's no automatic way, or accidental way those can go off. The self destruct basically blows a couple holes in the top of the SRM, at which point it will go completely to pieces on its own. Interestingly I actually worked on the box responsible for this stuff. It is pretty impressive. Made out of a 12"x12" brick of aluminum, hogged out to form a case, with some boards mounted in slots in the aluminum, and then the whole thing is potted full of engineering epoxy. It is basically the one 100.00000% reliability subsystem on the whole stack. The spec is basically "this cannot fail, period". Designing it and verifying it met spec was a pretty interesting project.

    --
    "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
  17. Environmentally friendly? by wfstanle · · Score: 2

    " What's more, the molecule consists only of nitrogen and oxygen, which would make the rocket fuel environmentally friendly."

    I'm not saying that the byproducts of combustion will be dangerous but just because it is composed of only nitrogen and oxygen does not automatically make it "environmentally friendly". One of the major components of smog also consists of only oxygen and nitrogen. It's nitrogen dioxide.

    1. Re:Environmentally friendly? by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying that the byproducts of combustion will be dangerous but just because it is composed of only nitrogen and oxygen does not automatically make it "environmentally friendly".

      No, but it makes it PR friendly.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  18. Verry funny by PPH · · Score: 2

    Nitrous oxide is also made up of only Nitrogen and Oxygen. Would we want that mixed into the air we breath? The very thought has me ROTFLMAO.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
    1. Re:Verry funny by innerweb · · Score: 1

      First time in years I snorted root beer. That was truly funny.

      --
      Freud might say that Intelligent Design is religion's ID.
    2. Re:Verry funny by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      Yes?

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
  19. Shuttle SRBs are neither cheap nor reliable by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Most modern solid-fuel rockets use pretty much the same fuel as the shuttle SRBs. It's cheap, stable and reliable but it does produce a lot of goop and the ISP could be better. If this stuff is stable it might make an excellent replacement for ammonium perchlorate oxidizer.

    Shuttle SRBs are more expensive and less reliable than equivalent liquid boosters. This is the main reason why SpaceX is only using liquid engines in the Falcon-9. ULA uses solid boosters for extra thrust on the Atlas V, but these solids are cheaper and more reliable than Shuttle SRBs. In addition, based on recent conference papers, I think they want to get away from solids in their next generation of rockets.

    So why is NASA planning on using boosters based on the lower performing, more expensive, and less reliable Shuttle SRBs in their new Heavy lift rocket? This is because the Utah Congressional delegation is lobbying heavily for the company that makes the SRBs. The Utah senators inserted text into the continuing resolution that NASA is currently operating under that they claim prevents NASA from even doing trade studies to consider any alternatives to using the Shuttle SRBs.

    Solids might have made sense in the 60s, but with current technology they are no longer needed except in a few specialized applications for robotic planetary exploration spacecraft.

    --
    There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
    1. Re:Shuttle SRBs are neither cheap nor reliable by MurphyZero · · Score: 2

      Solids do have some advantages over liquids. Primarily acceleration. But for human payloads, liquid rocket engines make more sense--particularly if an accident does occur, the engines can be shut off, allowing escape rockets to take the passengers away from the rest of the rocket. This is the Ares rocket's biggest problem--there are periods of time where the escape rocket may not be able to escape the solid vehicle underneath it..

      --
      Our founding fathers removed the guys in charge. Be American. Vote incumbents out.
    2. Re:Shuttle SRBs are neither cheap nor reliable by ModernGeek · · Score: 1

      They didn't even have an advantage in the 60s. Dr. Von Braun wouldn't even use them in any of his designs.

      --
      Sig: I stole this sig.
    3. Re:Shuttle SRBs are neither cheap nor reliable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is another reason, and it makes sense: solid rockets are awesome for ICBMs. Having your civilian rocket users prop up the solid rocket industry for the military's continued use is an argument that's already been trotted out in the congress.

      I think it's idiocy, personally--if you want an SRB stockpile, just make the damn SRB stockpile rather than forcing NASA to use solids. Accelerate your military booster testing program if you don't want the stockpile to get too big. I'd really rather see improvements from solids come from a military, unmanned payload side.

    4. Re:Shuttle SRBs are neither cheap nor reliable by Agripa · · Score: 1

      It is not so much building a stockpile as it is keeping the manufacturing infrastructure in place to minimize disruption if they need new SRBs manufactured on relatively short notice. For the same reason they continuously build aircraft carriers and submarines instead of doing a big batch and then stopping. If they stopped, the delay in restarting production would be significant.

      It is not enough to have the design and manufacturing plans. You need the workers and specialized infrastructure as well.

    5. Re:Shuttle SRBs are neither cheap nor reliable by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Liquids can be designed to have even higher acceleration (see the Sprint Anti ballistic missile). Currently built solids have high thrust/weight because they are made as boosters, not because they have inherently higher acceleration. Solids best feature is storablity in a "ready to fire" state without N2O2 or other such nastiness or cyro fuels.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
  20. how does it compare to the other t-word propellant by cellocgw · · Score: 1

    Does it have the power of thiotimoline ?

    --
    https://app.box.com/WitthoftResume Code: https://github.com/cellocgw
  21. Re:Solid rockets - Real Answer by MurphyZero · · Score: 1

    Actually they unzip down the side of the case. They stop at the aft segment though. That's enough to release the pressure though. RSO hands are not going to be anywhere near the button unless something is going wrong. But yeah half a second at most when the decision is made-transmitting the signal and propagating it thru the system will likely take as long. And NASA calls them RSOs, but they call themselves (M)FCOs (Mission Flight Control Officers)

    --
    Our founding fathers removed the guys in charge. Be American. Vote incumbents out.
  22. Re:Solid rockets - Real Answer by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 1

    Yeah. Apparently a couple millimeter wide crack is ENOUGH, lol. Those SRMs were an abomination. Just seeing them even considering SRMs for Constellation was enough to tell me it would never fly. They really are NOT safe.

    --
    "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
  23. Environmentally friendly ??!!!?!?! by idji · · Score: 1

    Just because it contains only N & O, doesn't mean it leaves only friendlies in the air. NxOy is the cause of many city smogs and lung problems. And O3 is also a nasty pollutant down here in the breathing zone. Hopefully ultraviolet is able to break it back down to N2 and O2 easily - then it is a friendly.

  24. So it goes. by suburbanmediocrity · · Score: 0

    Poo-tee-weet