What are rockets pushing against in space?

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In order to move, you have to apply an equal force to something else, right? So how can rockets move in space where there are no particles?

In: Physics

15 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

In a few words: they are simply splitting in half

The solid part (what we call the rocket) goes one way, the gas part (what we call rocket plume) goes the other way. That’s why a rocket is almost entirely made of rocket fuel that burns almost explosively, because gas isn’t really heavy by itself, so you need a lot of it and you need to throw it really really fast.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Think of it like kickback from a gun. If you’ve never fired one, I’m sure you’ve seen it on TV. You shoot a bullet, the bullet leaves the gun in one direction really fast and the gun pushes back the other direction (at a lower speed because it weighs a lot more).

A rocket is essentially doing the same thing. It’s shooting stuff out behind it at a really fast speed. The rocket is pushed in the opposite direction. This is true both in the atmosphere and in space.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Rockets move by ejecting a mass (exhaust gasses) at high speed opposite the direction they want to go.

Rockets actually work better in space because there is no air slowing down the exhaust gasses from the rocket engine – and of course there is no air in front of the rocket slowing it down either.

A simple experiment you can do to see this effect;

Use a garden hose with nozzle that you can lock in the “jet” setting. You can hold the garden hose a little ways back from the nozzle using the thrust from the water jet to hold itself up.

Now dunk it into bucket of water, or pool and see what happens to the thrust the water jet is producing. It decreases dramatically even though it now has water to “push” against.

Raise it back out of the water and the thrust returns.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Imagine shooting a rifle. The bullet being shot forward out of the gun pushes the gun, and you, backwards. The atmosphere around you and the rifle has a negligible impact on the amount of recoil you feel. You could shoot a gun in the vacuum of space and the recoil would be the same. Now imagine you have a machine gun and are sitting on a rolling chair. Firing the machine gun would propel you backwards. Rockets work the same way except instead of riding the recoil from bullets being fired, they are riding the recoil from the exploding hot gases inside the combustion chamber being expelled out the nozzle.

In fact, the atmosphere has a negative effect on a rocket’s performance. The rocket exhaust has to push the atmosphere out of the way on it’s way out of the engine, slowing it down and reducing performance. While we can optimize an engine to lose less performance as sea level, (the space shuttle main engines are a great example of this) at best we can only reduce the performance lost.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The ignited gases in a rocket engine ARE pushing against something else. That something is the rocket. Gasses are expelled in one direction, the rocket goes in the other. Balanced, as all things should be….

You don’t need any “additional particles”.