Space launch
Template:Spaceflight sidebar Space launch is the earliest part of a flight that reaches space. Space launch involves liftoff, when a rocket or other space launch vehicle leaves the ground, floating ship or midair aircraft at the start of a flight. Liftoff is of two main types: rocket launch (the current conventional method), and non-rocket spacelaunch (where other forms of propulsion are employed, including airbreathing jet engines).
Issues with reaching space
Definition of outer space
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There is no clear boundary between Earth's atmosphere and space, as the density of the atmosphere gradually decreases as the altitude increases. There are several standard boundary designations, namely:
- The Script error: No such module "Lang". has established the Kármán line at an altitude of Template:Convert as a working definition for the boundary between aeronautics and astronautics. This is used because at an altitude of about Template:Convert, as Theodore von Kármán calculated, a vehicle would have to travel faster than orbital velocity to derive sufficient aerodynamic lift from the atmosphere to support itself.[2]Template:Rp[3]
- Until 2021, the United States designated people who travel above an altitude of Template:Convert as astronauts.[4]Template:Rp Astronaut wings are now only awarded to spacecraft crew members that "demonstrated activities during flight that were essential to public safety, or contributed to human space flight safety".[5]
- NASA's Space Shuttle used Template:Val, or Template:Convert, as its re-entry altitude (termed the Entry Interface), which roughly marks the boundary where atmospheric drag becomes noticeable, thus beginning the process of switching from steering with thrusters to maneuvering with aerodynamic control surfaces.[6]
In 2009, scientists reported detailed measurements with a Supra-Thermal Ion Imager (an instrument that measures the direction and speed of ions), which allowed them to establish a boundary at Template:Convert above Earth. The boundary represents the midpoint of a gradual transition over tens of kilometers from the relatively gentle winds of the Earth's atmosphere to the more violent flows of charged particles in space, which can reach speeds well over Template:Convert.[7][8]
Energy
By definition for spaceflight to occur, sufficient altitude is necessary. This implies a minimum gravitational potential energy needs to be overcome: for the Kármán line; this is approximately 1 MJ/kg. W=mgh, m=1 kg, g=9.82 m/s2, h=105m. W=1*9.82*105≈106J/kg=1MJ/kg
In practice, a higher energy than this is needed to be expended due to losses such as airdrag, propulsive efficiency, cycle efficiency of engines that are employed and gravity drag.
In the past fifty years, spaceflight has usually meant remaining in space for a period of time, rather than going up and immediately falling back to earth. This entails orbit, which is mostly a matter of velocity, not altitude, although that does not mean air friction and relevant altitudes in relation to that, and orbit, do not need to be considered. At much higher altitudes than many orbital ones maintained by satellites, altitude begins to become a larger factor and speed a lesser one. At lower altitudes, due to the high speed required to remain in orbit, air friction is an important consideration affecting satellites, much more than in the popular image of space. At even lower altitudes, balloons, with no forward velocity, can serve many of the roles satellites play.
G-forces
Many cargos, particularly humans, have a limiting g-force that they can survive. For humans this is about 3–6 g. Some launchers such as gun launchers would give accelerations in the hundred or thousands of g and thus are completely unsuitable.
Reliability
Launchers vary with respect to their reliability for achieving the mission.
Safety
Safety is the probability of causing injury or loss of life. Unreliable launchers are not necessarily unsafe, whereas reliable launchers are usually, but not invariably safe.
Apart from catastrophic failure of the launch vehicle itself, other safety hazards include depressurisation, and the Van Allen radiation belts which preclude orbits which spend long periods within them.
Trajectory optimization
Impact
Space launches have shown among other things to increase aluminium concentration and pH-Levels around launch sites. That said proper regulation and measures can reduce and even increase environmental protection of launches.[9]
Furthermore soot snd debris from launches, particularly failed launches, have literally negatively impacted wide areas below.[10] Leftover of launches are for example dumped in the ocean at places like the Pacific Ocean area called the spacecraft cemetery.
Beside ecological environments, lands and their communities, particularly indigenous peoples, have been colonized to build the necessary infrastructure, disregarding them without reaching out for consultation or consent.[11][12][13]
Many rockets use fossil fuels, some launch systems use hydrogen, while some rocket manufacturers (i.e. Orbex, ArianeGroup) are using different launch fuels (such as bio-propane; methane produced from biomass).[14]
Launches exhaust often water vapor, which is a potent greenhouse gas and at high altitudes not very common. Also methane it self, which is used as a fuel, is a potent greenhouse gas.[15]
Carbon emissions
As the number of rocket launches is expected to increase, the cumulative effect that launching into space has on Earth is expected to be significant and not to be underestimated. A single common Falcon 9 launch emits carbon dioxide into the mesosphere of about Template:Val.[16] A SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket for instance burns through 400 metric tons of kerosene and emits more carbon dioxide in a few minutes than an average car would in more than two centuries.
Sustained spaceflight
Suborbital launch
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Sub-orbital space flight is any space launch that reaches space without making a full orbit around the planet, and requires a maximum speed of around 1 km/s to reach space, and up to 7 km/s for longer distance such as an intercontinental space flight. An example of a sub-orbital flight would be a ballistic missile, or future tourist flight such as Virgin Galactic, or an intercontinental transport flight like SpaceLiner. Any space launch without an orbit-optimization correction to achieve a stable orbit will result in a suborbital space flight, unless there is sufficient thrust to leave orbit completely (See Space gun#Getting to orbit).
Orbital launch
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The speed needed to maintain an orbit near the Earth's surface corresponds to a sideways speed of about 7.8 km/s (17,400 mph), an energy of about 30MJ/kg. This is several times the energy per kg of practical rocket propellant mixes.
Gaining the kinetic energy is awkward as the airdrag tends to slow the spacecraft, so rocket-powered spacecraft generally fly a compromise trajectory that leaves the thickest part of the atmosphere very early on, and then fly on for example, a Hohmann transfer orbit to reach the particular orbit that is required. This minimises the airdrag as well as minimising the time that the vehicle spends holding itself up. Airdrag is a significant issue with essentially all proposed and current launch systems, although usually less so than the difficulty of obtaining enough kinetic energy to simply reach orbit.
Escape velocity
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Types of space launch
Rocket launch
Non-rocket launch
References
External links
- Template:Usurped A periodic news digest of worldwide space launch activity.
- LATEST SATELLITE LAUNCHES from http://www.n2yo.com/.
- The Space Review is an online publication devoted to in-depth articles, commentary, and reviews regarding all aspects of space exploration.
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