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Rocket Men
To Infinity...And Beyond!
President Bush has outlined his plans for returning Americans to the moon,
establishing a permanent base there, and then going on to Mars. Of course, you
all knew that, and I'm just finally getting around to the topic.
I remember, when I was a kid in junior high school, my dad driving around our
city with a big American flag waving out the window of our car, honking the car
horn, and generally carrying on when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin made the
first moon landing. It was actually one of the most embarrassing moments of my
life. I slunk down in my seat as low as I could, so no one would recognize me. I
mean, I was really proud that our country could do something so cool, but come
on, Dad!
Looking back at that accomplishment from over thirty years later, I can see
why he was so enthused. America hasn't succeeded at meeting a scientific or
engineering challenge that big since those days in the 60's and 70's. I don't
want to believe that our ability to accomplish big things has become stunted. In
these times, are we only ready for a difficult challenge if it involves war? If
that's true, it's a sad indictment of our country and culture, and it concerns
me.
I don't see a lessening in our scientific or engineering capability. I
think we've become stunted in our policy and in our imagination.
What has happened to our can-do spirit? The spirit of inventiveness and of
pushing the envelope has always been one of the hallmarks of the American
character, and I see it perhaps slipping away.
I hope I am wrong about that.
But, in these times of political correctness, it appears to me that it's
somehow wrong to be too successful - it makes those less successful
feel bad. Since we're the hyper-puissance, we must be sensitive
to those less fortunate. So many people believe that all of the money that we
spend on expanding our horizons and accomplishing great things - like going to
planets beyond our own - is money wasted. They believe that it should be spent
on the poor, or the environment, or researching cures for disease, or in some
other politically correct way.
None of those things are wrong, by any means. They just aren't
enough.
History shows, I believe, that over the long term, the best way to
reduce suffering in the world is to raise the average standard of living for
everyone. How does that happen? Through advancement of science and technology,
as well as through good government and good policy. It isn't an accident that,
in general, the countries that value freedom are also the most technologically
advanced and have the lowest levels of poverty. All of those things are
intertwined. Freedom gives individuals and corporations the incentive and
opportunity to pursue technological advancements in all areas (including food
production). Freedom also allows each individual to pursue opportunities to
improve his or her life through education and employment. Freedom produces
competition, which gives individuals more choices, which encourages
technological progress. Freedom and technology work synergistically to raise the
overall standard of living.
And so, I am supportive of pushing forward into space, and I generally
support the vision outlined by President Bush. Humanity as a whole will benefit
from the scientific and technological progress that moving into space will
require. Of course, science and technology will progress anyway, but solving the
difficult problems that moving into space will pose will require scientists and
engineers to stretch, exercising their knowledge and creativity to the utmost.
Over the long term, it also will inspire young men and women to learn and grow,
so that they can take part in the opportunities in science and engineering
arising in all fields. The new generation of scientists and engineers will
create new technologies that will raise our standard of living, benefiting the
whole world.
It is too easy, in our concern for the poor and disadvantaged of the world,
to become stunted in our thinking - to lose our drive for the future, weighed
down by the burdens of the present. We should not let that happen. To relieve
the burdens of the present - poverty, disease, violence - we must invent new
ways to lighten the load. We must think big thoughts and overcome enormous
challenges. Moving into space and on to new worlds is just such a challenge.
Hybrid Vigor
That previous bit of thought was inspired by a post on
Instapundit on
hybrid rocket engines.
All rocket engines use two chemical components to produce thrust: a fuel
and an oxidizer. This is no different than any other system that burns
something; for example, your fireplace combines wood - the fuel - and oxygen in
the air - the oxidizer - to produce heat and light. A jet engine combines jet
fuel and oxygen in the air to produce heat and thrust. A car engine burns
gasoline with oxygen from the air to produce heat and mechanical power.
A rocket engine is different from typical engines (like a car engine or jet
engine) because it can't directly use oxygen from the air as the oxidizer when
it burns its fuel. It must carry its oxidizer with it.
In the past, there were two basic types of rocket engines: solid fuel rocket
engines and liquid fuel rocket engines. The space shuttle uses both types.
The shuttle's main engines are liquid fuel engines. They burn liquid hydrogen
and liquid oxygen that is stored in the huge external fuel tank that the shuttle
is strapped to. Pieces of hard insulating foam coming off the external fuel tank
and hitting the shuttle wing were what caused the shuttle Columbia to break
apart when it re-entered the atmosphere on its last flight. Liquid fuel rocket
engines have the advantage that they can be throttled up and down, or even shut
off, like a car engine, but they are very complex and expensive. The liquid
fuels are often very dangerous and difficult to handle.
The two rockets strapped to either side of the space shuttle's main fuel tank
are solid fuel rockets. Solid fuel rocket engines are really very simple. You
very well may have even fired one yourself, right around July 4th. (Roman
candles and bottle rockets are solid fuel rockets). They are, more or less, a
firecracker with one end left open. When a solid fuel rocket is lit, the hot
gases formed when the fuel burns rush out the nozzles on the open end, producing
thrust. As you might guess, solid fuel rocket engines are cheap compared to
liquid fuel rocket engines, but they cannot (typically) be throttled or shut off
once they are ignited, and they can be very dangerous if not properly
constructed. The shuttle Discovery blew up when one of the solid fuel rockets
malfunctioned due to cold weather and a design flaw, causing it to explode.
For many years, engineers have researched methods of constructing a rocket
engine that is inexpensive and simple like a solid fuel rocket engine, but can
be throttled or shut down like a liquid fuel engine, and is also much less
dangerous than either. It appears they have succeeded with a
hybrid rocket
engine.
Hybrid rocket engines are rocket engines that use fuel that is in one phase
of matter (usually a solid) and oxidizer that is in another phase of matter
(usually a liquid). They are called hybrid engines, because they are a hybrid (a
cross) between a solid fuel rocket engine and a liquid fuel rocket engine, and
they appear to have the advantages of both, with the disadvantages of neither.
That is, they are simple and cheap to build, but (in the more advanced examples)
they can be throttled or shut down. The fuels and oxidizers used are generally
safe and relatively easy to handle. In fact, for several years
hobbyists have been building powerful
rockets using hybrid engines that use PVC plastic (the type of plastic used
for sprinkler system pipe) as the fuel and laughing gas (nitrous oxide, or NOx)
as the oxidizer! Lately, engineering students have built a
hybrid engine that uses candle wax as the fuel. Even
table sugar has
been used as a hybrid fuel. No, I'm not joking! This all works, believe it or
not. Some of the hybrid engine rockets have reached altitudes of over 20,000
(yes, twenty thousand) feet!
Why am I so enthused about all this? Well, for one, I'm a geek, and I just
think this stuff is way cool. I had a small model rocket when I was a kid in
junior high school (one of the Estes kits that I built), and I flew it several
times. It was a blast, and I hope I can get my son interested in model building
and rocketry when he's a bit older.
Second, the fact that engineering students and hobbyists are advancing
technology in this challenging field, developing and flying new types of rocket
engines, points out exactly what I was writing about previously. These people
are having fun, and they have the spirit of inventiveness. I lamented its
apparent waning above, but these hobbyists, inventors and students prove that it
isn't dead yet. Will George W. Bush's re-focus of NASA take hold and re-energize
it with that same spirit - the spirit it had in the days of "the right stuff"
and the moon landings? I certainly hope so. NASA will need it to succeed, and
success on that scale will give me hope for the future of our country.
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