Why can’t fighter jets just fly straight into space?

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Edit: I didn’t understand how a jet engine worked, but now that I do, the question has been amended to this…

“Why does a rocket have to travel faster and faster the higher up it goes? Shouldn’t it require less and less speed as it is further from the earth it gets because there is a non-zero number(very small) of negative gravity change the higher you are?”

Edit #2: I think I suck at asking this so I’ll ask it like a 5 year old.

We have all seen videos of rockets taking off. They start very slowly, and then build in speed. Although, at first, they build up in speed. It’s not as if they torque off the earth at 20,000mph, although that would be ASTOUNDING to see. So here’s my super drawn out really dumb question that I cannot wrap my head around the answer for the life of me.

Let’s say you have a rocket going 100mph going 90 degrees straight up from the surface of the earth. Why can’t it just keep going 100mph straight up. Just keep going and going. Up, straight up. Up up up and away? Why can it move up starting from zero miles an hour? If it can move up at 5mph even for an instant, why can’t it continue at that velocity all the way up.

All the answers have been wonderful if I was asking how to get something in orbit. I’m asking why 100mph 90 degrees going straight up works down here, but not up there? I cannot find a straight answer to this question no matter what I google. I appear to be bad at research or this is just a stupid ass question. I really just don’t understand the physics of this at all.

Let’s try this another way. Say I threw a magic baseball that whatever velocity it was tossed at, it maintained until it hit a object. It doesn’t disregard gravity. It just has a magic anaerobic motor that maintains the speed. Like cruise control. Say I throw it 90 degrees straight up at 35mph. Will it leave Earth? Why or why not?

In: Engineering

25 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

I don’t think rockets *have* to travel faster and faster the higher it goes – I think they just *do*, since it’s a byproduct of rocket engine design. Rockets burn fuel at a constant rate (at least solid fuel rockets do); however, the weight of the rocket goes down as fuel is burned, and air resistance goes down as the rocket climbs and the atmosphere thins. Therefore, the rocket keeps burning fuel and keeps accelerating, and accelerates at an even faster rate as weight and air resistance decrease.

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