Advanced topics in model rocketry 0262020963


282 26 349MB

English Pages 649 [325] Year 1973

Report DMCA / Copyright

DOWNLOAD PDF FILE

Recommend Papers

Advanced topics in model rocketry
 0262020963

  • 0 0 0
  • Like this paper and download? You can publish your own PDF file online for free in a few minutes! Sign Up
File loading please wait...
Citation preview

TOPICS

IN

ADVANCED

Gordon George

K. J.

William

The

Cambridge,

MODEL

ROCKETRY

Mandell Caporaso

P.

Bengen

MIT

Press

Massachusetts,

and

London,

England

Copyright © 1973

by

The

To

Institute

Massachusetts

Technology

of

without

No part of this book may be All rights reserved. or electronic reproduced in any form or by any means, or by recording, including photocopying, mechanical, without system, any information storage and retrieval permission in writing from the publisher. This

book

and

bound

was in

printed Columbia

by

The

Colonial

in

the

United

Library

of

on

Milbank

Press, States

Congress

Fernwood

0-262-02096-3

model

begun;

and

of

world,

the

to

the

and

rocketry advanced

without

whom

G.

Harry

could model it

continue.

Vellum

America.

Cataloging model

in

Publication

629.47'52

Data

rocketry. Rockets George J.

72-10386

\

AB2484

Stine,

not

have

rocketeers

could

i

ISBN

whom

Carlisle

Opaque

1. Rockets (Aeronautics)--Models. 2. (Aeronautics)--Performance. I. Caporaso, II. Bengen, William P. III. Title.

TL844 M36

H.

Inc. of

Mandell, Gordon K Topics in advanced

Orville

not

FOREWORD

PUBLISHER'S

of

preparation

the

A

form.

book

after

a considerable

pense

of

to

act

of

detailed

is

from level

detail A

the

author's

delay

recognize

of

the

in

and

Perhaps

to

table

typeset of

been It

photographed

is

of

books

contents

is

consistency issued

a

to

edited

comprehensibility

and

standard

the in

has

book

print

may

inevitably

hobby

satisfactory

become

of

under

minor our

editorial

imprint.

included.

of

of

MIT

Press

rate

of

with

has

rocketry.

the

an

until

they

may

treatment

performance.

difficulty

of

fail

advanced

mathematics,

been,

model

and

complexity

physics,

the

and

designer's

recent

years,

the

ask,

should

model

one

examines

the

rocketry

and

communication

by

has

(of

projects

within,

industry; various

nothing

our

kits, the

this

which of,

supplies,

proliferation of

the

challenging

time

our

retention

improved

due

to

book

The

and

or

interesting

and

miscon-

widespread

that

Since

avocation.

Sections

a

measurably

content

technical

technically-oriented rocket

had

attention.

modelers

of

because

older,

its

of

state

twelve-

the

1969

In

most

losing

was

hobby

if years.

several

past

rocketry

their

merit

the

self-evident

participants

advanced

increasing

the

rocket

model

sponsored

of

this

people

and

sanctuary

Why,

becomes

over

programs

model

of,

stability

higher

that

these

value

intrusion

community,

technical?

to of

Perhaps

rocket

intuition

that

enough

the

modeling

the

that

hobby

ception

model

or

upon

better-educated The

rocket

analysis

answer

year-old

the

for,

associated

so

the

of

model

The

not

need

resent

engineering

directly

though

the

they

of

justification.

subjects

ex-

currency

members

require

to

that

it

may

unassisted

typescript.

completeness

present

detailed

this

of

text

necessarily

to

work

some

either

time

The

To

specialized

publication

composition

and so

or

though

in

affected.

The

of

editing

publication

prevent

content

text

publication

its

all.

at

not

or

delay

formal

to

transition

the

and

significant

of

number

large

make

manuscripts

work

a monographic

between

gap

time

the

close

to

is

format

this

of

aim

The

PREFACE

is

one)

improving

aimed the

introduction

literature of

National

annual

a

by

number

at

lines of

of

more

the

conventions

Association

e

-vilii-

"senior

rocketry's

projects,

making

by

,

our

college-level

model

rocketeers

our

hobby

a

of

limits

jas

been

chusetts

M.

Institute

in

part,

analytical

philosophy

state

frontiers

of

Though by

are of

different

unified model

dynamic

of

our

the

of

the

so

1965

work

of

analysis

drag,

analyses

in

and

of

flight

trajectory

Chapter

and

the

2 are

of

altitude

have of

and

logical

in

The

of

the

results

Chapter

4

to

of

provide

enable

the

drag

an

a working

as

of

Harry

Stine,

tended

to some

fully

sound

current

analyses

of

from

state

of

the

of

of

Chapters

experienced

knowledge

optimized

Mark

gaps

precisely

It

what

factor

2

modeler

algebra

standpoint

our

knowledge

before

due

to

present

jet

two.

If

4,

optical

Malewicki

of

Chapter

theory

must

await

exhaust

that

lower

influence found

altitude

in

has

had

this

area.

preface

to

this

volume

of

and

would

gases some

the

is

be

and

can

on

by

as

the

as

much

as

as

some

magnitude

experimental

complete

suggest

great

become

relative

a

determined

its

reliability the

however,

arguments

jet

G.

their

have

estimating

little

and

been

coefficient

predictions

systems

in

and

for

accuracy

tracking

are,

performance

instance,

as

generally

design,

could

be

there

the

Institute

have

drag

for

in

such

of

rocket

the

3;

verified

conducted

Douglas

experimentation

No

Massachusetts

the

--

unfortunately,

deficiencies

at

coefficient

must

accurate

tests

and

yet,

the

drag

a method more

Chapter

effect

tunnel

researchers

flight not

experimentally

various

current

of

been

by

results

the

has

exhaust

of

taken

the

theory

have

in wind

Mercer,

in

2

Laboratory

Data

elimination.

the

author

confirm

still

Chapter

Projects

Technology.

suspect,

the

and

performance

chapter's

written

dynamic

intuition

the

oscillations

treatments

will

nearly

results

that

a

and

that

of

the

as

that

static

with

yawing

permits.

hobby.

analysis

and

regults

models

current

whole

pitching

The

criteria

rocket

thrusting-phase

been

of

combined

physical

the

rocket

purpose

viewpoints

used

the

Gerald resulting

The

model

volume

analysis.

Dr.

represents

the

a consistent from

--

establishes

this

research

Mercer.

design

and

of

structure

as to present

Mark

a

over

Barrowman,

S.

within

chapters the

and

1970

Massa-

the

of

Society

through

James

art

members

Rocket

rocket

designer's

various

authors,

from

model

by

Model

Malewicki,

J.

engineering

rockets

stability,

upon

Douglas

performed

Technology

of

extending

period

Gregorek,

current

from

taken

five-year founded,

research

good

design

of

material

the

of

Most

then

Aeronautical

for

opportunity

of

goldmine

contributions.

engineering

and

scientific

veritable

the

within

found

who

effects

performance.

are

to

by

existing

the

provide

The

several

by

written

were

herein

presented

treatments

The

3 to

1967.

in

racing

slot-car

of

hobby

sister

befell

that

cycle

fad

“poom-and-bust"

of

kind

the

our suffering

the

of

cross-section

broader

against

guard

helped

have

public,

4

with

to

interest

of

activity

an

rocketry

model

and

and

programs

These

hobby.

the

of

continuity

and

stability

and

problem",

of

altitude

Chapter

the

insure

help

to

by thereby

on

del mode

solve

help

to

part

their

done

have

all

--

exclusively

a

monthly

independent

first

estimates

ho bby

rocket

the

serving

publication

the

magazine,

Rocketry

Model

of

establishment

the

Rocketry;

of

-1x-

a

reality. verification

inherent paucity

without

in of

a

If book page less than 290: PDFPage = (BookPage/2) + 9 If book page greater than 290: PDFPage = (BookPage/2) + 10 -x-

has

not

had

no

We

we

for be

children

can

herein which It

is

will our

and

be

put

possess hope,

of

that

model

rocketry

is

not

but

an

activity

adolescents,

rewarding

even

for

will

find

that

You

adults. to

good

good

and

stability

moreover,

that

for further advanced

for

further

refinement

some

of

research of

those

in

you

in the

theories

J. K.

Cambridge,

May, 1971"

.*

the

of

Description

the

Flight

2.3

Drag and Side Force

3.

that

can

Aerodynamic Disturbances

3.2

Mechanical

Disturbances

this

and

presently

Massachusett

work

a foundation governing

Caporaso Mandell

°

Dynamics

Introduction 1.

8

Equations

of Motion

il

12

APPROACH

43

45 47

TO

Gordon

capability.

Mandell

CHAPTER A UNIFIED

1

34

technically

in

K.

Forces

3.1

models

PLIGHT

Caporaso

Descriptionof the Perturbing Forces

contained

ROCKET

and

Differential

written

the design of model rocket vehicles. George Gordon

of

31

pastime

find

field

Separation

Weight

altitude

will

1.2

2.2

a

designing

maximum

and Rigid-Body

high

information

the

Point-Mass

12

projects

just

J.

OF MODEL

6

1.1

Thrust

well-educated,

use

practical

a basis the

similar

and

this

have

means

early

and

challenging

proficient

you

show

to

we

level,

of the Problem

2.1

late

a

at

written

material

Definition

and

inclined

technically

By

you.

for

are

undergraduate

college

or early

hope

you

hand,

assimilating

of

volume

this

2.

other

the

on

capable

school

larger

Company) .-

Engineering If,

1.

1

DYNAMICS

Gordon

Centuri

the

and

Industries

TO THE

of

the

of

some

through

INTRODUCTION

George

of

treatments

elementary

AN

oriented

Handbook

OF CONTEDTS CHAPTER

literature.

Stine's

Harry

G.

has

who

technically

less

TABLE

mathematics

and

anyone

its

or

rocketry

Estes

notably

(most

manufacturers

to

available

rocketry

in

topics

technical

or

excellent,

the

and

Rocketry

Model

average,

of

themselves

avail

to

modelers

science

experienced,

less

younger,

in

model

to

exposure

previous

schoolwork

above

consistently

been

advise

feel

anyone

to

age,

of

years

whose

sixteen

under

anyone

to

4t

recommend

not

do

We

everyone.

for

not

is

it

and

technical

highly

is

pdook

this

caution:

of

word

2

AERODYNAMIC K.

STABILITY

53

and Moment

of Inertia

Mandell

63

The Dynamical

67

Equations

1.1

Euler's

Angles

1.2

Angular Velocity

1.3

Applied Moments,

67 69 Angular

Accelerations,

74

-xii-

Fuler's

61

The Linearized Theory

Damping

and

2.1

Corrective

2.2

The Linearization

2.3

Coupled

2.4

Homogeneous,

Solutions

3.1

3.2

84

for

Equations

Particular

Generalized Homogeneous Response

3.1.2

Complete

Response

to Step

3.1.3

Complete

Response

to

3.1.4

Steady

Dynamical

Behavior

Input

3.2.3

Complete Response to Impulse Input

167

3.2.4

Steady

Forcing

3.2.5

Roll Stabilization

Rate

170

4.2

Normal

Method

Force

185

Coefficients

5.3

The

138

138 163

to Sinusoidal

Damping

at

the

Roll

and

Locating the Center of Gravity

Center

of

44

The Damping Vament Coefficient

5.5

The Longitudinal Moment of Inertia

Barrownan

201 205

241

249 and Criteria

Design Definition; Inertia 255

6.4.2

Static

6.4.3

Demping Ratio

6.4.4

Roll Rate

6.4.5

Construction and Testing

Stability

254

Center of Gravity Margin

and Moments

255

255

256

257

CHAPTER3 DRAG OF MODEL ROCKETS THE AERODYNAMIC William P. Bengen Introduction

2.

261

271

276

Basic Concepts Relating to the Study of Drag 2.1

203

235

Parameters

1. Basic Considerations

196

4.3 The Corrective Moment Coefficient

the

229

234

6.4.1

134

Pressure:

Coefficient

Moment

222

Coefficient

of Varying, the Parameters

178

fnalytical Determination of tne Dynamic Parameters 4.1

Tne Corrective Moment

130

Rate

Complete

Response

5.2

Design Procedures

3.2.2

State

217

6.4

Poll

213

Experiment

Moments

Rolling Rockets

Forcing,

Parameters

the Torsion-Wire

Inertia:

of

5.1

6.3 119

the

Zit

Model Rocket Design

6.

of

211

Experimental Determination of the Dynamic Parameters

109

Input

Input

Properties

Effects

Response

to Step

General

6.2

Generalized

Response

4.7

Radial Moment of Inertia

93

3.2.1

Homogeneous

Tne

Representative

Nonzero

at a Constant,

92

4,6

6.1

to Sinusoidal

Response

Interest

of

Cases

93

3.1.1

Impulse

90

Solutions

Steady-State

and

Dynamical Behavior at Zero Roll Rate

State

89

of Equations

Systems

Particular,

Dynamical

to the

81

Moment

Approximations

Decoupled

and

76

Equations

Dynamical

w

1.4

-azili-

260 Atmospheric Properties for Model Rocket Filgnt 2.1.1

Density

261

260

of

-xiv-

2.3

Dimensionless Coefficients and Quantities The Reynolds

2.2.2

The Drag Coefficient

2.2.3

The Coefficient

302

303

3.2

The

Distinction

3.3

The Laminar Boundary

3.4

The

3.5

Boundary

Turbulent

3.5.1

308

of Viscosity

Importance

3.6

5.2

299

Laminar

Between

and

Layer

Transition

on

308

Flow

Fluid

Flat

6.

3.6.1

Body Corrections

3.6.2

Fin Corrections

Pressure Drag 4.1 Introd

362

uction

.

36

to the

347

Flat-Plate

4.2

Boundary-Layer Separation

Pressure Drag of the Forebody and Fins

4.3.3

Launch lug Drag

Skin-Friction

7.

363

(Forebody) Pre

ee 387 Besse tee 4.3.2 -3.2 Fin Pressure Drag 388

Increase

Drag

Rotation

to

Due

of the

The

United

at Angle

417

of Attack

of Simple Stability

Model

Rockets

Zero-Lift Drag Coefficient of the Fins

471

6.1.2

Zero-Lift

Body

436

Coefficient

of the

6.3

General

-l

7.2

of the Datcam Method

Analysis

429

Datcam

Control

and

The Datcom Method Applied to the Javelin Rocket

Model

428

in Turbulent Flow

6.2

7

376

Drag

Air Force

Drag

414

420

Zero-Lift

States

12

6.1.1

Method

453

The General Configuration Rocket (GCR)

6.3.2

Dependence of the Drag Coefficient General Configuration Rocket 460

6.3.3

Dependence of the Drag Force on Reynolds Number for the General Configuration Rocket 468

Rocket

Drag

at

App.

Limit

Ss on

Drag

Divergence

the

Transonic

Jicability

and Supersonic

of

454

on Reynolds

Speeds

Incampressible

Number

473

Analysis

473

475

Determination of Transonic and Supersonic Drag 7.3 Semiempirical Coefficients 478

56 8.

429

483

6.3.1

360

4.3

Nosecone

355

359

2

4.3.1

,

342

Skin-Friction Drag of Boundary Layers With Transition Corrections

Total

Calculation 6.1

3.5.3

357

5.2.4

Drag Due to Surface Roughness

Effects

Coefficients

Fin-Body Interference Drag at Angle of Attack

5.4

3.5.2

‘Three-Dimensional

5.2.3

316

342

Roughness

Fin Drag at Angle of Attack

Plate

330

402

Body

5.2.2

Drag

Effects of Pressure Gradient and Reynolds Number of Surface

Drag at Angle of Attack

5-2.1

5.3

Plate

400

401

Drag at Small Angles of Attack

313

Flat

a Snooth,

400

Introduction

Flow

Turbulent

Layer on a Smooth,

Boundary

Layer

Real

in

391

Base Drag

Other Contributions to Model Rocket Drag 5.1

of Pressure

Drag

The

5.

292

Constituents of the Total Drag Coefficient

3.1

4.4

292

Number

2.2.1

Viscous (Skin-Friction)

“ky

286

Viscosity and Kinematic Viscosity

2.1.2

2.2

|

Experimental Determination of Drag Coefficients

484

for the

a

-kvii-

-xvi-

8.1

Wind Tunnel and Balance

8.2

Vertical Wind Tunnel Drop Test

8.3

Vertical

8.4

Conclusion

The

485

System 489

490

George

The

J.

Caporaso

Differential

Equations

Representation of the Flight

Mathematical

1.2

Selection of the Coordinate System and Differential Equations of Motion 517

The Non-Oscillating Vertically 520

2.2

The

Specialized

Rocket:

Solutions

Differential

2.1.1

Fehskens-Malewicki

2.1.2

Caporaso—Bengen

2.1.3

Caporaso-Riccati

for

The Differential Equations of Motion

3.2

Numerical Methods Trajectories 564 for the Digital Canputation of Nonvertical

3.3

Examples of Nonvertical Model Rocket Trajectories

Solution

Solution

The

4,2

A Numerical

4.3

Solutions for Standard Foreing Functions

2.2.2

Extended Fehskens—-Malewicki

Numerical ceMethods Peto Sh

for a Non-Oscillating

of the

for

553

the

Vertical

for

520

Case

522

Methods

528

529

Solution

Rocket

568

4.4

Differential

Method

Performance

578

Equations of Motion With Perturbation Terms for

the

Digital

Camputation

in Cases of Oscillating Rockets

of

582

585

4.3.1

Homogeneous Response for General Initial Conditions

4.3.2

Step

4.3.3

Impulse

4,3.4

Response

The Effect

Response

590

to Sinusoidal Foreing

of Dynamic Oscillations

535

in the Coasting

t Computatio n

Compared

Phase

539

of Altitude to

Numerical

Solutions

5.1

Bengen's Maxima

5.2

Model

594

591

on the Altitude Performance

603

Design Optimization

606

5.2.1

Initial Design Definition

607

5.2.2

Drag Coefficient

5.2.3

Weight

5.2.4

Dynamic Stability Optimization

5.2.5

Reduction of Drag at Angle of Attack

5.2.6

Philosophy

Rocket

586

588

Response

Typical Model Kocket

579

Altitude

Recapitulation and Qualitative Features of the Analytical Results

Solution

the Digi tal

Approximate

by the Interval Method

the General

Launched

to Multistaged Vehicles

Caporaso-Bengen

2.4

of

525

Extended

Solutions

Formation

523

2.2.1

Validity

564

4.1

514

Forces

Vehicles

Equation

Solution

Extension of the Solutions

2.3

2.5

509

of Motion

1.1

2.1

ons for Vehicles Launched at Any Angle

3.1

505

General

Soluti

Coupling of Dynamic Oscillations to the Trajectory Equations

497

ELEMENTS OF TRAJECTORY ANALYSIS

1.

Rocket: “see

494

CHAPTER 4

Introduction

Non-Os cillataing he Veren

607

Optimization

608

of Design and Flight

610 611

611

of a

602

-xviil-

APPENDIX CORRESPONDENCE

A AND ENGLISH

BETWEEN METRIC APPENDIX

PHYSICAL CONSTANTS

APPENDIX

APPENDIX

618

CHAPTER

1

C AND DECIMAL NOTATION

620

AN

D

A WORD ABOUT THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FIGURE

617

B

AND PARAMETERS

CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN SCIENTIFIC

UNITS

CREDITS

623

OF ROCKETRY

INTRODUCTION

TO

THE

DYNAMICS

OF

MODEL

621 George

J.

Caporaso

and Gordon

K.

Mandell

ROCKET

FLIGHT

SYMBOLS Symbol

A

coefficient used in writing example of P(t)

Ar

reference

area

Cc

Constant

of

integration

Cp

drag coefficient

°Do

coefficient

Cy

normal

of drag

force

at zero

angle

of

attack

coefficient

drag Magnitude of thrust, whose direction is assumed to be forward along the vehicle centerline F

thrust

F(t)

thrust

Fay

average

Pi

thrust

by

of time

thrust values

approximate

used

in

Iy

total

L N

characteristic length : nomal force

R

radius measured

R 3

c

te)

method

impulse

total

imp ulse

specific

e

computing

summation

Isp

R

ee

,.- 2Fg

1

as a function



impulse

from

e

the

center

of

the

Earth

Reynolds number radius side

of

the

Earth

force

magnitude is assumed centerline

of exhaust to

be

velocity,

rearward

along

whose tie

direction

vehicle

|.

ye

symbol =

Meant

exhaust

symbol

velocity

ac )

differential of ( )

d(

)/dat

derivative

f(

)

function

of

( ) with

of angle of

A(

of

respect

magnitude

z=

acceleration of Barth's

acceleration

value

k

parameter of drag at zero

D

mass

Dy

burnout

De

propellant

2,

initial

Fs

mass

an,

increment

én,

change

n

exponent

t

time

t'

time

Marcvttg

ty

of

Earth's

sea level

angle

of attack

mass mass

mass

flow

rate of mass

in mass

at

of

of t used which

interval

of

added

to

the

exhaust

in writing

a time-derivative

example

is

time

of

F(t)

computed

ing intervals used in computing total impulse

burn

time

magnitude of velocity; also airspeed

W

weight

“tf

welght

y

stream

rocket

_

x

gravity

gravity

&

At

¥ane

attack

g

of g at

to

of propellant

horizontal vertical

coordinate, coordinate,

charge

range altitude

Meaning increment

)

of

BO)

aun oF S11 1)

rag

angle

( ),

change

in

(

)



of attack parameter of drag

bp

absolute

y

kinematic viscosity

‘2

mass

finn $C Jat

limit as n approaches infinity integral of ( ] with respect to ( )

)

due

to angle

of

attack

viscosity

density

-6-

as

do

professional

formulate

1. =

not

single

at one time

speculating

subject

How

high,

and

true

the

wind?

if

or

the

it

at

most

even

@#ill

Will

presented

to

not?

an

natural

with

the

a

new

most

concerns

It

the

purpose

enable

any

will

complete

our

The to

to

of

the

rocket

flight

known

to

physical

anyone,

to

these

whether

--

Such

design.

flyer,

How

to

They

are

of

of

model

to

answer

advanced

and

as

go

these

one

is

interest

are

tnem

a

reasonably

accurately

general

methods

equations exact

that answers

performance

model

are

sciences.

equations

or

have

to

be

and

available

solved

to

the

questions

among

the

most

Complete,

have

rocketeer

would

never

exact,

been

obtained

professional

of

difficult

and

unique

by

sclentist

degrading

the

the

model

rocket

obtained,

who

are

way

other

very

of

well,

can

be

expected

and

we

have

not, are

become

mathematical

obtained

As

a

and

matters

only any

a

small

knowledge

discouraged treatments

practical

cannot

We

of

how

rocketeer

no

simply know

readers

mathematics,

You follow

the

you

this

rocketeers

our

accordingly. cannot

in

freely

We

advanced

1f you

used

solutions

is

of

have

used

advanced

accurately.

without

solved

be

type

a

of

are

calculus

fraction

ofa

motion

there

describing

model

still

flight

those

because

our presentation

adjusted

therefore,

various

have

to

of

interest

tne badly

performance

flight

@

witnout

material

of

ex-

be

can

calculus. the

difficult

because

cannot

such

as

integral

which

these

that

however,

quite

the

its

notations

calculus

discussing

solution

compiling

in

is

possible

during

and

and

the

This

be

to

them

instance,

for

describing

instant

by

for

with

familiar

are

desired

various

the

both

they

are

equations

steps

the

describing

are

the

equations,

used

have

and

of

extensively

methods

that

series.

that

differential

of

methods

expect

not,

given

differential

called

to

formula;

infinite

to

solutions

algebraic

the

any

at

right

shall

approxima-

make

a form which

an

that

find

we

solved

be

to

them

that is,

accuracy

fact

alter

in

or

simplifying

--

approximations

liberal

most

book

that

table,

no

us

gives

form"

single

a

therefore,

Such approximations

invariably

"closed

in

a

we

engineers,

permit

that will

still

this

and

subject to certain

accuracy.

indeed

by

pressed

these

researchers.

with

and

graph,

of

but

obtain

the

the

information

rocketeer

it

when

course

and

into

will

questions

mind

present

fly

high

to

rocketeers

straight

is,

come

and

to

performance.

fly

that

up?

that

book

most

order

easy,

the

date.

model

solutions

far?

background

theoretically

the

how

sport

this

mathematical

compute

and

interested

using

hobby

way

competition

educational

completely, in

of

the

common

flight

it

in

himself

found

Will

go?

on

rocket

casual

vital is

and

rocketeer

rocket

"weathercock"

wobble angle,

model

rocket

it

model

or another,

of

a

will

fast

how

launched

are

4

a

world who has not, the

a high

possible

Definition of the Problem mere is ts probably

on

OF

DYNAMICS

THE

TO

INTRODUCTION

AN

problems

assumptions

and

tions

FLIGHT

ROCK#T

MODEL

the

sclentists

should the

solutions

will

be

most

eo

-8-

been

have

rocket

flight

be

the

and

described attacked

left

for

the

detailed

the

of

chapters

reserved

for

while will

be

them.

rocket By

in

problem

of

computing

flight

is

one

"kinematics"

itself, taken

while to

mean

is

of

meant

for

and

relationships

between

movement

moments

which

produce

it.

classes

of motion

the

translational

mass

concentrated

motion f or

all

of

In

which

motion

of

by

the

purposes

of

interest

body

motion

dynamics

the

study

mathematical

and

the

general,

rigid, the

about to

its

model

of

of

of

«

kinematics. movement

this

study

model

of

book,

forces

one

distinguish

can

bodies

considered

and

the

center

of

rocketeers,

are

as

be

the

various

extended body

and

purposes

at its center of mass

described

the

mathematical

can,

physical

detail

analytical

the

"dynamics" the

in

the the

and two

4s

that,

say

the

mass. the

Since, center

of

if

center

to refer

of

to

The

and rotation are illustrated

for

the

one

another.

and

of

by example

practical

the

translational

and

the

rotutional

rotations

the

a

be

solved

effect

of

such

solved

be

be That C.G.

it,

and

if

mass

did

not

in the

C.G.,

its

about

motion

of

of

independently state

a

of

affairs

since

involvec, ignoring

while

solved

be

could

property:

would

equations

mathematics

the

rocaet's

its

model the

and

about

about on

point

the

the

wotions.

model

acting as

C.G.

could

motion

velusble

and

could

simplify

motion

useful

rotute

the

of

rotations

greatly

of

model

tue

forces

to

tne

point-mass

the

rocket

the

of

between

describing

rigid-body

net

the

tending

The

very

rotation

motion

rotation

equations the

of

motion

interrelation

the

describing

affect

rigid-body

to

physical

certuin

the

moments

equations

while

rotation

ignoring

translation.

any

EBurth's

forces

rotational

of gravity.

a

those

not

did

the

the

a point

or center

describing

from

For

capable:

of mass

itself

possess

decouvled

be

its

be used

differential

equations

would

to

hereafter

of any

C.G.

would

affect

equivalent

C.G. will

center

absence

translational

1.1 Point-Mass and Rigid-Body Dynamics The

the

0.G.

flight

considered

l.

of

to

be

of translation

Figure

the

can

rocket's

concepts

motion

will

problems

themselves

solutions

a model

its

object

the notation

motion

of

forces

introduced,

be

will

chapters

be

an

In

briefly

performance

the

which

by

subsequent

in

presentation

the

methods

capable

The

will

rockets

model

of

motion

the

influence

which

of

gravity,

in

various

the

discussed.

be

will

solution

analytic

closed-form,

forms

into

problems

these

cast

to

used

techniques

and

considered,

be

will

performance

mass

model

computing

of

problem

general

the

chapter

this

In

tables.

mathematical

of

handbook

a

plus

obtained,

which

formulae

algebraic

the

in

substitutions

numerical

relatively

using

numerically

out

worked

be

can

solutions

simple

And

themselves.

solutions

these

that

find

will

you

case

every

in

the

-=-

presentations

these

of

results

final

the

in

anterested

-J-

and

extended

body

moments

C.G.

translution.

from

the

various

however,

field,

gravitational

the

wich

couple

These

external

components

through

moving

of

tuere

rigid-body

forces

atmospheric

and

in

atmosphere

the

are

external

rotation

moments

resistance,

to

tae

arise

or

drag,

-lj-

acting

on

the

body

pigid-body

motion.

motion

to

due

angle

to

change total

with

the

drag

force

on

to

rigid-body

The

O-G.

the

gravity

of

position

the

1

the

illustration

to

motion.

position

1

undergoing

rocket position

The to

any

in 2;

rocket

position

the

of 2

rocket

motion.

(a) has

its

ceater

has not

(b) of

The

center

translated rotated

has

at

rotated

gravity

of

from all

from

without

during

we

system

to

solve

a

coupled

the

followed

have of

a

the

the

of

is

it

of

of

which

this

on

influences

drag

wita

the

components velocity

toe

sodel

a

of

of

influence

of

Motion

much

easier

Equations generally

taoan

equations various

the

in

used

1s

science

full-scale

various

point-mass

the

it

chapters

adopting

by

type

permit

the

equations.

{ndependent

generally

problems

the

the

cuange

also

under

will

vector

motion

of

ite

rigid-body

gorce

of

atmosphere

autaors

procedure

tne

motion

equations

set

toe

toerefore

strongly

vary

in

affecting

torast

magnitude

remarked,

the

thus

will of

the

such sotion

the

Differential

the

approximations

of and

coupled

a

coanges

gravity,

point-mass

vehicle

mutually

set,

for

engineering

simplifying

illustration

about

translation.

rotational

of

Separation as

angle

differential

therefore,

are,

of

components The

through

travelling

from

ana

rigid-vody

toe

venicle,

vertical

since

the

rotate

to

act

solve

and

local

motion,

to

have

and

the

tne

thrust.

Since,

Translational

change

the

motion

undergo

forces,

presence

the

1.2

1:

also

0.G.

resulting by

the

to

due

gravity

Figure

In

horizontal

rocket

©

experienced

toe

gnould

other

airflow

and

which of

will

or

it.

bots

model

vertical

model the

tue

incident

respect

the

If

affect

aerodynamic

the

rotations

which

an d

rigid-body equations of motion to be decoupled (and also greatly the

simplify separation solutions

the

two

solution of each of the decoupled

cannot of

types

result

acceptable

of motion

in exact accuracy

1s slight

solutions; only

if

the

or “weak”

"

sets).

it will coupling

in some

Such a

yield be between nse. sens

-1}

-12prom

The analyses of model rocket

flight

presented

in this

book will

therefore be restricted to cases of weak coupling.

As will

the

coupling

be in

so

fact

slight

such

forces

the on

compared

motion

to

C.G.

the

the

have

of

any

given

model

2-

This model

Such

as

of the

and

forces

will

hereafter

2:1

whose

forces

this

the

to

point-mass

motion.

be

a

used

mot

be

be

will

and

be

moments

motion

of

devoted

model

rocket

is

and

consider

ion of its

referred

to

give

referred

center as

during

rise

to to

the

forces

of mass.

flight

the

course

perturbing

of

engine

term due

applied to

the

rapid

the

force exit

of

produced

a

rotations.

exhaust

a

gases

the

wore

toan

Produce

a

frog 5 Mall

greatest

an enclosed

hot

Bae

nozzle

possible

velocity

of

of

in that tie oxygen required

furnace

however,

which

specially

rocket,

the

ig a bignly

for the

to

To

understanding

some

tue

examine

we

suppose

emitting

gas

the

negative

y direction.

say

At,

the

mass

of

a mass of

the

propellant of

a

how

grain.

engine

changes

by

what

mathematicians

by dt, aire

also

eren the

tial

at

refer

referred

rocket

of

time

will

also

quantity,

Amy

amount t

to as infinitesimal 1% aay alculus

In

this

pee

fo) me

denoted

case so

tae

small

: change

mass as

-4Be-

as

to

be

denoted

as

be

the

¢XP erienced

instantaneous

> igs

enaaging chsage to

=

a

considered

be

to

The

by ~ame: se

which the mass of tae rocket 18 a £ tae aifferential mass ti the ratio o

so that

the nozzle, the

tine,

of

interval

to in the languase. of care .

of magnitude

velocity

short

some

2,

Pigure

of

rocxst

exhaust

produces

engine

rocket

hypothetical

In

mized

are

oxidizer

and

fuel

gas Mme leaves

exhaust

rocket

the

In the case of the solid-

a constant

at

is

which in

a homogeneous

form

gain

engine

chemical

uence

and

space,

outer

of

spaceflight.

rocket

model

For this reason a rocket will con-

vacuum

in

used

are

itself. the

in

burn

to

propellant

forces.

by

to

A chemical

rocket

differential

to

18 no

burned

If the time interval is permitted to become so shor

forces,

rigid-body

as

the

ig

itseiy

pressure

produce

type

the

thrust,

on

fuel

extreme

to

stream.

rockets

by

the

as

in

to

rockets.

the

under

so

engine

combustion of the fuel is obtained not from tie air, but from an oxygen-rich chemical, or oxidizer, carried along with the tinue

which

Thrust

Thrust

exits

to

capability

The

which

gpecialized

c

encountered

moments will

in

gnaped

fuel

"first-order"

altitude

then

of

Forces

the

forces

chapter

forces

enumerate

rise

latter

will

obtaining on

the

equations

gurnace

exnaust

small

point-mass

methods

motions

the

Flight

will

those

of

of

give

flight

are

decoupled

of

that

nozzle.

together

each

rigid-body

to

the

the

purpose

rigid-body

which

model's

model

of

section

opposed

These

the

sections

discussions

Description

to

assumption

rotations

influencing

well-designed,

One may therefore

the

approximate

for

considered

is

rocket.

remaining

the

under

solutions

of

be

rigid-body

forces

coupling

can

unreasonable.

the

obtained,

effect

influence

to

other

been

that

of motion

due

the

The

is not

separate

re-introduce

brief

rockets

equations

the

Once

of

all

a restriction

decouple

idea

for

4,

Ohapter

in

later

and

2,

Chapter

in

shown

sts

tnens

tae

iven

rate

by

f tial differen

att

called

the

which

over

interval

time

derivutive rate

of

of

mass

cnange

the

rocket's

change

nass

wita

explanation

above

differentials

a derivative about

calculated

of Figure

Am, is =>

Fz

the

dm,/dt =

dm, (also

-0(dm,/dt)

the

rate

written and

thus

In

thrust.

rocket

direction.

(-y)

becomes

of

quantity

the

expels

rocket

@ in

Origin

2:

of

mass

"In

the

of mass m).

The

acts

in

Am,

(ty)

At

as

expulsioa

the

exhaust

the

at

limit"

thrust

interval

time

a

--

F is

becomes

or

"mass

given

direction.

by

analytic

velocity

dt

flow the

rate"

equation

--

to

this

book;

is

how

know

need

used to

will

is

an

approximate

In

the

is

just

case

the

is of

to

be

slope

an

itself

one is

the

and

what

used

supplied derivative

of the tangent line

in at

when

case as

formula

of

You

will

expression second whose

function table

graph

or

any

given

time

the

graph

touching

not

understand

to

The

the

tne

means

algebraic out.

when

variable.

algebraic

written

is

this

calculus.

an

one

an

expressed

by

the

by

as

given

calculations

of

not

usable

is

function

such

already

of

taking

independent

the

original

any

it

taken

a graph,

of

are

(in is

variable

derivative

supply

we

variable

differential

in

perform the

wherever

derivative

the

from

needed

method

is

derivative

is

mass)

case

dependent

arguments

limiting

method

the

computable

is

which

such

when

the

cases

such

first

terms

of

once"

at

“all

independent

in

respect

ratio

and

done

the

formula

algebraic

some In

is,

that

time);

and

differential

of

function

a

They

rather,

this

(in

variable

dependent

the

the

At

time:

but it provides no information computed.

each

The

methods.

possible

two

are,

as

picture

a mental

actually

finding

they

two;

the

of

ratio

to

with

mass

of

derivative

forming

are

somehow

by

the

represents,

physically

derivatives

how

of

in

useful

is

respect

= -dm, gw derivative to time

The

also

is

ratio

This

occurs.

tuat

form. t'

at

ee

-16A4m--5.49

value

the

example

obtaini ng

mass

The

time-

of

that



Figure

in

Now

the

and

the

thrust

of be

will

have

had

some

familiar

with

the

concept

know

that

alr eady

moreover,

may

resulting

from

the

and

velocity

4 it

will

that

the

be

where

P denotes

being

is

ejected.

being

detailed

body

a

from

mass

is

drn|

Tangent

the

momentum

4

t (sec) oe

transfer

0.0

101.0

upon

At

expelled Chapter

considerations

is

|m

0.2

15.1

12.8

0.6

11.3

0.8

10.2

1.0

9.4

1.2

9.0

produced

by

the

motor

and

c

is

the

of

rate

The

3:

Figure

thrust

derivatives

student s of

a

the

will

thrust

note,

are

force

and

vector

the

exhaust

quantities;

velocity,

that

is,

ir magnitudes and the directions in which they act must be specified to describe them completely. Mass (and its time deri vative), on the other hand, is a gcal can

the

have

only

line

10 12

@

Am

=11.3-15.1-

-3.8g

Ot=0.6-0.2=0.4

dm

Am

sec

=-9.5 g/sec

mee

a magni tude

scalar

quantity;

it

Note

dm/dt

that

Am

is

a

a

derivative,

model

rocket

approximate

illustrated:

are

line

of

‘Two

gases.

"tangent"

of

concept

change

mass

of

Both

g/sec

]

©)

exhaust

oth

B

(sec)

(g)

0.4

of

physics

6

t

you,

of

TP

the

rocket.

5

physics

depends

In

2

rver moving velocity of the exhaust gases as measured by an obse

with the th with

sec

dme

=



_

it

involved

relationship =

which

by more

shown

Fe

(1)

with

some

momentum

of

rate

mass

which

at

rate

the

quantities:

two

that

elementary

0 f momentum; the

of

expulsion

the

fact

the

to

exposure

you who

dat |

0

the EOCkS= == transferring momentum to Those

for

to to

equal al

is

motor

of 2 rocket

in

lies

engine

4ts

of

Bt-9.6

rocket! s

a

of

derivative

time

the

between

by

tables.

and

graphs

from

derivatives

con nection

thrust

which als

procedures

the

describes

o

indicated

is

t erms

these

of

meaning

(a)

and

negative

as illustrated

here

numerical because

as

graphical

solution

to

due

engine

methods

mass

illustrated

for

solution

decreases

is just the negative

as

expulsion

computation

the

using

the

the

by

by

the

of

(b).

@ table tine

use

iacreases.

of am,/dt.

-18-

is

directed

V ehi

the

al ong

di

those

Ww hil e

axis

ong 4 }tudinal lon

el e

arre

rearward

ected rec

negati

cons s id e red

and

Accordi

V e.

dot

denoting

save

used

to

only

are

thrust

is

practical

the

differentiation for

in

positive

model

thrust

the

right-hand

quantity

rocketeers

is

directed

m,

respect

to

time

derivative

that,

Note

as

also

already

forward

since

side --

which positive

confirming

know

along

to

be

the

the

alternate

(an

sometimes

is

quantities

equation

of

as

superscript

the

it

write

with

time

the

writing).

involved a

sometimes

and

dm, /dt

derivative

the

to

refer

engineers

rate

notation

calculus

turust

directly

istics

and

(2),

what case;

rocket's

we

the as

namely

centerline.

in

static of

in

Certification

Contest of

the

in

thrust than

rate

with

always

assume

the

burning

from

time

Rocketry.

in

the

exhaust

(2)

mass

if you

for

enougnh

velocity The

period.

to

more

to

flow

are

Certification

be

finds

careful

mass

velocity.

In

fact,

can

with

be

units.

it

purposes

during

then

or

variations

that

the

rocketry

however,

Committee

in

constant

rate

Testing

and

curves the

from

variations

model

during

severe,

too

not

is

generally

one

due

accurate

exhaust

equation

of

are

variations

almost

Standards

engine,

given

one

any

somewhat

the

Association

National

In

from

differ

Safety

received

have

which

types

motor

The

variation

This

type.

their

for

average

may

motors

rocket

model

individual

are

which

thrust-time

type.

same

the

of

engines

of

firings

manufacturers

recorded

traces

of

number

large

a

averaging

from

derived

rocket

curves,

thrust-time

so-called

the

form:

graphical

as

rate

the

by

supplied

always

are

time

of

functions

as

engines

flow

model

thrustsof

The

calculation.

tnis

of

coaracter-

nozzle

mass

and

velocity

exnaust

the

obtain

tne

compute

and

casing

propellant,

tne

from

coamber

nozzle.

tne

aad

generally

engineers

rocket

however,

practice,

propellant

tne

of

properties

combustion

the

of

shape

and

size

thermodynamic

and

combustion

the

from

rate

flow

both

calculate

to

possible

mass

the

and

velocity

exhaust

the

theoretically

also

is

It

time.

function

a

as

motor

that

of

thrust

the

compute

of

functions

as

motor

rocket

given

any

of

rate

could

you

byproducts

rocket

flow

mass

that

In

F=C Tt

the

of

and

dime

Professional

flow

velocity

exnaust

the

given

were

you

if

then,

characteristics

that

(2)

mass

the

cz-ec

eq

theory,

time,

convention.

this

In

fore-and-afy

posi tiv: -e, _—_o

e red

consid

are r

full

forward

directed

quantit ses

vector

which

in

convention

sien

sim pler,

a

with

velocity

@ nd

force

for

notation

vecto r

to

de

the

replace

can

We

a case

such

In

astern.

ad

-19-

the

easily

flow is to

entire computed

Suppose,

for

-20-

-2l1-

average

thrust from as low as 3 newtons

sufficient

know of

to

on

how

enable

one

of

A knowledge

engine

the

average

the

rocket's

the

thrust

time

for

which

modeler

can

compute

will

impart

according

to to

the

(3) I;

is

the

performance.

It

as

engine

the

also

called

calculating

of

later

any

is

necessary

Knowing cnange the

and

total

the

(not

Equation

-_-

ee ee

Re

epeny

wR ee

ae me we 8

the

the

(3)

{

is

of

"integrated" variable

with

we

(in

to

F(t)

this

respect

have

calculus

as

an

case to

in

which

length

formula called

engine

an

general gral

impulse,

for

is

the

calculus

of

notation

of

the

engine.

functional

encountered

so

far

needing

for

integral

F(t)) which

its sign,

is called the

solution.

quantity

the

integrand, is

of

and

F(t)

to

be

and

Where

A

and

n

of

or

the

a

in

and

which

given

are

such

many

books

Formulae

and

are

as

used

For

time

then

+)

+c

or

ise

running

integration

O

is

and

seid

ty to

O to tp.

be

taoere

only in

to

to

the

tne

inte-

refers

functions

Burington's

nave

Handbook

Standard

references if

to

is

specific

specific

CRC

case

which

between

is

algebraic

refer

integral",

the

P(t)

limits

opposed

as

from

if

an

without

used

two

which

exists

as

are

obtained

used

instance,

= at®

frtedt = At

values

taken

by

constants,

The

also

is

cage

variable

the

formula,

“definite

great

running

identify

be

integral

integral

of

the

written and

tnis

of integration,

can

can

there

the

engineering.

is

It

these

(in

concerned

for

integral

listed

Tables

F(t)

to

of

Tables,

are

integral"

integrals

and

or from

that

limits,

value

tabulated

The

The

integration

form

(the

tne

algebraic

shown

form

with

The

science

tp,

of

to

and

number

first

"indefinite

Mathematical

of

Charge)

actual

of

P(t).

rocketeers

(F(t)at

Mathematical

after

0 and

have

yerlable

integrand

well-defined

actual

tne

integration,

The

written the

ag

variable

differential

"dt"

model

an

mathematicians

by

the of

as

to

been

delay/tracking

integral

referred

ways

far

to

tne

between

As

limits).

imoulse,

the

limits

performed

independent

The

after

hence

the

to

is the first

techniques

symbol

be

counting

variable;

be

the

referred

written

some

for “thrust as a function of time", and ty is the total burning time

always

are

19,

variable.

given

ty (F(t)at

total

running

19

the

relation

the

t)

(3).

the

the

that

equation

of

these

which

newtons,/

not

is

time

and

as 100

effect

of

on,

or

desired

overall

burn.

momentum

choose

also

erans/

to

sizes

of

however,

a function will

total

rocket,

It =

where

predict

varies

the

the

to

mass

to as high

alone,

thrust

flow

time,

variety

to

modeler

the

permitting

configurations,

a wide

in

come

engines

rocket

Model

performed,

little

a

described

be

will

velocity

exhaust

average

the

is

method

easy

An

thousand.

@

by

by multiplying

second

newton

converted

be

easily

can

which

kilograms/second,

in

rate

exhaust

the

obtains

then

one

, ) ne kilogram-meter/(second®)

one

that

Remembering

in meters/second.

velocity

the :

and

newtons

in

given

is

thrust

the

that

instance,

the

by

students

functional

-22-

-23-

where

0 i

by

determined

ne

burn

the

over

constant

is

at

th

thrust

&

describes

which

0;

the

of

con ditions"

case

the

is

{interest

particular

of

problem.

Then It

At?

x

A

limit.

upper

the

at

That

is,

equal

is

limit

minus

this

case,

in

value

the

the

of

value

the

to

taken

value

the

integral lower

the

at

impulse,

total

that

calculus

of

rule

a basic

integral

a definite

taken

it

Now

zero.

is

of

problems

all

in

that,

found

be

will

In

such

an

—we

you

can

impulse

In

is

fact,

from

according

(4)

it

the

thrust

total

for

equal

total

by

constant

the

that

just

the

multiplied

of

see

to

the

impulse burn

the

impulse,

case

is

time,

average

which

to

of

thrust

constant multiplied

always but

for

equal all

thrust

has

thrust

been

to

the

cases

itself

by

the

the

burn

average

other

must

determined

total

be

than

(3)

=

that



It

the

that

as will

the

for

"by

be

found

rocketry

is

given

approximately

PAt]

+

Fobto

+

Frht7

+ Fehtg that

and

they

exact

than

more

get get --

Fshtz

will

+

narrower

and

in

fact

Podts

the

as

this

thin, is

just

+

can

Pebte

be

nuaber “In

narrower.

infinitesimally and

+

rectangles

better

according

impulse

by

P4bty

eight get

total

The

work.

for

accurate

sufficiently

intuitive,

an

such

indeed

und

eye”

in

but

this,

do

to

by

mathe-

many

are

There

ways

precise

done

will

model

rectangles

become

more

and

In

time.

burn

approximated

been

has

curve

the

of

rest

the

a drop-off

by

followed

ignition

engines:

rocket

model

of

classes

wuich

4a,

Pigure

of

curve

we

suppose

done

is

this

how

see

one

numerically,

computed

be

can

describes

pages.

cover

literally

would

or

all

at

formula

known

rectangles.

adjacent

approximation

increases

Fay = I¢/tp

thrust

been

has

evident

1s

at

thrust-time

exact

method



thrust

"spike"

in

that

formule

algebraic

smaller

the

of

time).

newton-seconds.

thrust-time

the

approach

this

time.

calculated

from

to

To

formulae.

eight

all

impulse

total

many

in

integral

its

constant

it

4b

physical

the

no

"fancier"

virtually

So

either

is

initial

of

series

Figure

= Aty

simple

the

the

4b

matically

- A°0

no

that

of

a fairly

to

ig

example

an

is

there

there

integral

typical

is

given

there

cases

as

take

a

ty

Atp

complicated

Figure

[r(t)at = at], - at], =

so

without

computing

is

time

and

newtons

in

measured

impulse

suppose Suppose

F(t).

{R(t)at = At +O

Cis of

2

total

But

time:

F(t)

seconds,

19

thrust

rocket

model

Since

x

(forces

of

units

hag

impulee

total

that

see

also

can

You

c@

considerations

P hy sical

be

y which must generall lled the “initial.

of integration"

“co c nstant

sa

the

+

used, of

the

and

rectangles limit",

approximation the

definition

of

a

{

..348+.234+.213

we O80. 440 +.330+3.115

249.7% 01 274,97 N-sec

N-sec

= 5.20

16

=

zZ

12+



FLEE

ait

+

EE

HH

9389*19

f

+4

I

iH

|

ayace

ae

. BREE

{

|| t

(sec)

|

|

©

impulse

is,

that

three

panels

(b)

the

I,

has

been

1s

enclosed of

I,

the

cardboard found

been the

found

curve. of

the

1 by

(c) by

B4 engine

equal

N-sec)

(in

of

methods

of

the

areas

square

of

the

grid

(in

approximate

(d)

the

weight

1 N

high

has

with

the

(d)

was

most

accurate

is

5.0

N-sec.

N-sec

0.1 of

squares of

been

determined

and

in

a

this

cardboard case,

as

and

the

of

gram-forces

of

integral,

rectangles

N-sec)

number

other

this

in

weight

it

of

total

The

represents

the

and

it.

;

thrust-time

its

obtaining

series

a

by

determining

long

by

enclosed

sum

In

of

integral

the

to

The

engine.

B4

Type

NAR

the

approximated

the

each

comparing

Method

of

approximate

as

curve. sec

area

been

has

computed

In

by

some

show

rectangles. I,

the

to

curve

In

is

engine

the

0 f

I;

curve;

and

curve

thrust-time

the

shows

Panel

integration.

of

concent

the

and

{mpulse

Total

4: :

Pigure &

]

(a)

a piece I,

cutout the

has of

actual

©

6

HH

EF

za

I

oe

|

FES

{|

Er8 EH 1.2 o fe) HeCEEE 4 t (sec)

|

re

i

r

"se

;

©

oe

90 g-50

N-sec

@

ee

we

“ete

@

coorlinube

bhe

amd

funetiun

that

of

wraph

the

between

enoloaed

wrew

and

funebson

#

of

Jubeaces

the

between

relationalip

enoentiul

t

numerical

similar

on

wathemalloul

the

~ fim S Mbt =f P(vat

~~

A

\ Ww vloh

Lhe

is

notation

top for

culoulus,

in

used

as

-1

Figure

erate

heavy

~

St

= 60: 7

)

Curve

with

initial with

an

=

engine,

B4

Type

of

would

Curve

enabling a

of

Type

port.

port. it

to

tapered

Its

high-energy

produce

thrust-time

port

a

in

of

a of

engine propellant

blackpowder

engines

end-burning

Curve

(c):

These

they

have

core-burning B62

Type

also is

having slow-

characteristics engine.

be

that

more

gradually

near

the

been

the

a great The of

form

rocket

which

is

of --

the

nitrocellulose-type

tail"

the

in

LAR

in

those

Figure

of

that

B14,

the

said

are

a charac-

exhibit this

attained

is

peak

and

engines

Bl4

the

rockets

occurs

Smokeless

--

and

was

followed of

have an

gunpowder, of

constituent

powder

century,

variutions

compounds

black

major

the

during

propellant

solid

used

the

still

China

in

of

varieties

twentieth

essentially

stating

also

behavior,

rocket

the

of

first

propellants.

beginning

propellants

many

by

period.

burning

invention

developed.

improved

model

the

Ages

the

described

unlike

but,

they

with

case

the

is

which

configurations

grain

thrust-time

tueir

than of

end

Since

Middle

in

peak

curve with

like

curves

Although

“three-dimensional".

much

rapidity

--

engines

rocket

their

ports;

motors.

thus

is

“kick

or

port-burners

also

are

engines

tapered

teristic

curves.

engine,

Bl4

perchlorate/polyurethane

ammonium

require

representative

engine,

Se.

to

thrust-time

rocket

model

constant-diameter

a constant-diameter burning,

(sec)

O06

O05

O04

O03 of

(b):

peak. a

t

classes

Major

(a):

engine

o2

01.

0

5:

Figure

eons

E62

307

been

thrust-time

have

-=

F

EB and

Classes

Zz

wall

tne

installed.

are

model

largest

the

of

Many

©

90

has

grain,

the

of

axis

torust-time Tne

blow"

engines

motor

spike.

a model

they

which

in

rocket

the

to

1204

high-thrust

to accel-

end-buraing

its

and

end-burner

NAR

used

toward

the

in

the

These

outward

as

of

central

the

“sledge-hammer

a

deliver

they

that

models.

core-burning

the

accelerate

can

engines

these

On)

Oe

eagine

radially

of

the

of

single,

a

of

consists

10

short-time

forward

than

area

that

than

greater

20

w

curve

along

progress

to

surface

burning

The

thrust-time

multistaged

or port,

rather

casing

the

and

core,

burning

causing

tne

a high-thrust,

rockets

a hollow

have

2

represents

Bl4 motor,

type

of

5b

introduced

by

at

"“double-base"

nitroglycerin-

“composite”

most

and

propellants

Ps

wa, cnn pee

-30-

.

DREN

no

-31like

rehlorate lyurethane/ammonium pe poly d@ many missiles an Minu teman guided

the

and

polaris

engineer

asxs

is,

question

lies

in

propellant;

?

combustion

the

specific

total

impulse

unit

mass

of

propellant.

specific

of

definition

is

impulse

speaking,

is

impulse

My

where

is

in

newton-seconds

weight

per

measure

in

used

system

MKS

the

The

Iy-.

impulse

total

kilogram.

computing

when

physical

consistent

strictly

rocketry

model

therefore

are

Rocket

impulse,

svecific

use

however,

engineers,

the

using

Tee

where

We

total

impulse

EB I ORES SPS ORY 5 TRI

Re

Isp

of

is

(7)

I,.

exhaust

is

= I4/we

weight

newton-seconds

definition the

the

of

propellant

newton

especially

velocity

required

to

this

=--

or

convenient

through

€ = eIgp

specific exist

the

to

definition

simply

in

simple

produce

Igp

seconds.

that

it

relation

recently,

units

The

engineering

Isp

to

Barta's

gravity

field

(9.8

impulses

is

a

motor

velocity

the

computing

the

mass

in

and

knowledge

of

the

of

a model

or

engine's

and

technology,

cost

either

given

exhaust

tarust-time

using

motor

thus

velocity

(2)

equation

from

to

matter

simple

by

Standards

NAR

the

by

rocket

model

given

any

rate

flow

excess

but

pressures,

a

of

of

value

in

curve.

Weight

The

weight

Barth's

weight

gravitational

given

(8)

where,

exhaust

There

impulses

published,

and

himself

deliver

seconds.

any

therefore

1s

use

obtained

a

It

to

(7),

propellants

rocketry-

model by

using

motors

specific

measured

that

equation

engines

175

chamber

delivered

of

average

in

use

1s

Committee.

of

ignition

pressure,

that

Testing the

nigh

quantity

and

of

These

deliver

at

impulse

specific

manufacturer

the

which

their

prevented

rocketry.

neigndornood

temperature,

of

2.2

the

burned

when

the

a

in

types

to

48

of

range

the

in

impulse

perchlorate/polyuretoane

model

propellants

far

so

in

propellant

blackpowder

pressed

several

ammonium

introduced

seconds

motor

the

has

relates

More

solid

240

and

According per

been

compute

definition (6)

huve

The

for

units

the

specific

of

values

exnibit

have

the

providing

in

consumed

of using

engines

rocket

seconds.

problems

propellant

of

mass

103

of

Isp = 1+/me the

acceleration

high-performance,

th e

Strictly

efficiency.

propellant's

a

the

meters/sec.@).

grains

the

of

from

Specific

g is

Model

this

to

impulse

abl F e ‘ obtain

the

mathematical

(5)

Tsp

The

the

where

roc ket

the

answer

at?"

is,

of

u measure

thus the

&

called

aq uantity

that

of

is

powerful

“How

rockets

umong

rom

questions

first

the

of

types, > one

l: ble aila avai

many

;sounding

propellant

4

selecting

When

use.

in

currently

the

in

used

mixtures

field.

1s

the

force

A rocket

Of

exerted

mass

on

it

by

m will

have

the

Barth's

by Ww

as

rocket

before,

3

ng

zg ig

the

(vector)

acceleration

of

ro

ae

ee

aed

=32-

field.

The

of the

gravity

field,

Barth -- or “straight value

the

speaking,

th ®

of

vertical.

e

to th

My

(12)

Me = { oT20 ) at

where

mg

1

the

(13)

at the Barth's

Accordingly,

-_

rocket

model

any

ever

apogee Ro.

The

book

The

of

be

This

mass

from

the

the

was

established

rocket

would

the

all

between

equation

does

it

thrust

(2).

mass

the

result

as

the

function

rocket in

is

ceases

burning

at

time

tp,

this

during

its

flight,

due

the

expulsion

to

thrust. rate

(2) of

that

the

mass

at

or,

of propellant

of

can time

In mass

now in

be the

the mass

of the

Section expulsion

used form

since

in

the

engine

before

of

the

rocket

burn

and

the

model

In

large

constitutes

at

ignition.

change

due

to

the

This

rocket

fact,

the

when of

for

all

a

model

the

point

showing

any

tendency

acts

in

by

flight

through

that

4,

away

matter

the

called

the

rotate

0.G.

about

object in

any the

downward

may

0.G., along

this

and tae

the

book

or balance

all

direction.

vertical.

of mass,

suspended

be

the

remaios

object,

of

of gravity,

relatively

vector

center

ceater

tne

performance.

«ay

scope

of

considerably

from

the

to

is

weignt

the

occur the

for

"tips"

veuicle,

fraction

altitude

tae

the

nowever,

Chapter

of

or

small

of

propellant

direction or

boosters

within

which to

the in

space mass

rockets,

of

burnout

purposes

identical

point:

a

rocket

point

a

liftoff

model

after

and

only

shown

rotates

from

the

continuously

lighter

model

rocket,

practical

as

a model

the

rocket

taken

be

be of

1s

has

In

will

thrust, the

of

burnout

decreases

Missiles

expenditure

as

originate

to

ut

calculation

tae

weight

always

most

had

appears

of

guided

it

invarient

may

Ne

a

Unlike

which

-

welght

engine

simplifies

The

My

such

mass

mass

=

ignition.

slight.

, cc

engine

is,

the

propellant

so

than

the

at

the

an

m =m, - ('2L) . the

than

g,.

is

Equation a

greater

a model

produces and

in

calculations

vary

variation as

of

magnitude

rocket

motor

model's

weight

In

weight

rocket

as

the

(10) When

a model

relationship

determine

on the

have

in-flight

2.1

to

of

to

total

Mp

during

than

higher

much

--

meters

however,

negligible.

taken

weight

though.

confirmed),

of altitude

wholly

& will

greater than Ry and Even a 20,000-foot

of R only one tenth of one percent

effect

therefore,

any radius

6,000

(about

flight

officially

value

Ris

of g at that radius.

g is the magnitude

= f zou)

ignition,

where R, is the radius of the Earth, g> 1s the magnitude of ¢ surface,

= My

relation

&80 = FyR 2

(9)

ty

(11)

Strictly

d increasing . altitude

with

according

surface

tue Barth's

above

1

loca

the

along

down"

of = decreases

cen ter

the

is

case

this

in

which

points

always

force

weight

gravity

-3}-

direction

the

in

without rotations

weight

local

vector

vertical.

TUE Foye

ae

tos

-34-

Drag and Side Force i nteresting» ly the most

2.3

Probab 1

atmosP here

is

sage,

Which

physicists

@ nd

which

it

the

moves,

write on

a model

of

magnitude

moving

v

given

is

Ay

is

a reference

cross-sectional

the

rocket

parameter

it

area

of

which

and is

depends

also

(more

C.G.

with

betw

area

normal

its

drag

to

(15)

Re

= iv

f is

the

drag

where

the

total

drag

of

the

air,

v

is

is

the

length

of

is

also

a

at

f

wnich largest

the

is

usually

diameter

coefficient,

taken body

to

velocity

tube

be

the

used

in

a dimensionless

shape

of

the

model

generally)

on

the

Reynolds

and

its

number

usually denoted

by the

symbol

fen the instantaneous velocity vector respect t o the air and the Orientation of

of

the

«, the

denoted

by

R,

given

by

the

factor

scaling

aerodynamic

about

density

usually

is

physicist

English

the

for

negotiate.

to

airflow

named

(1842-1912),

Reynolds

dimensionless

a

number,

Reynolds

The

the

for

difficult

more

becomes

rocket

tne

of

shape

effective

the

and

drag,

the

calculating

in

used

A,

area

reference

the

than

larger

becomes

presents

it

which

airflow

tue

to

--

perpendicular

1s,

effective

tie

since

increases,

also

increases

rocket

model

a

of

attack

coefficient

that

--

facts

all,

of

enough

be

angle

at

operating.

The angle of attack, angle

on

zero

(again)

a

1s

and

relation

is model's

rocket's

so

in

and

the

air,

the

magnitude

of

the

velocity

the

rocket

viscosity,

object

other defined

of

vector

and

interest.

L

There

as

ye P that

sometimes

is

number

Reynolds

the

(17) The

of

or

viscosity

“#is the

density

kinematic

16)

area the

from

As

of

angle

the

6.

illustrated

is

attack

of

angle

of

concept

The

axis.

be

will

by

and Op is the drag

attack,

which

the

of

air

rocket

will

it

fundamental First

through

model

a

present

rockets.

Figure

jn

Osborne which

Ds 3 0ps,v?

where

eS

to model

rocket

(14)

For the

a few of the most

just

down

as it pertains

of

3.

in Chapter

presented

of

drag

the

influence

factors

these

all

surface

by

mechanisms

physical

the

of

discussions

Detailed

with

of attack.

angle

its

and

characteristics,

finish,

its

of

quality

medium

the

detailed

its

of

drag

velocity

the

shape,

and

size

its

moves,

it

which

through

and

density

of the

is a function

a body

pas-

its

to

of

viscosity

moving

* body

on The

drag:

call

engineers

longitudinal

the most

resistance

aerodyn umic

the

the

i + ugh throug

tainly

acting

force

late,

calcu

to

ex @ na difficult

cer

and

as

written

Re = VL v

Chapter

(17) (a)

is

viscosity

of

concept

For

3.

can The

be

the

summed

flow

dynamically

about

be

will

more

the

present,

up in two two

similar

fully

importance

the

of

and

equations

statements:

geometrically

if

discussed

Reynolds

similar

numbers

oblects

for

explained

(15)

rene ge el

-37-

Sete

the

two

(bd)

axis

angle

6:

Figure is

deflecte a through

as sumes

velocity

respect

is referred

«

vector Ve

that

with

to

the

The

of attack.

angle x fro m the

the

to

as

the

is

no

horizontal

respe ct

to

the

tnere

ground.

air

is

rocket's

the

of

direction

"angle

of

wind,

so

that

same

as

This

the its

with

inertial

force

viscous

force

any

in

effects

of

numbers

less

means,

for

placed

in

the at

flight

is

the

same

some

or

apply

may

not

per

second.

Reynolds

varying

of

sea-level

at

room

The

In

number

is

temperature

unit

any

air

combination

case,

this

model

1.225

the

on

x

when

when drag

1073

is

if

it

is

airplane

about

maintained

is

that

so

a

in

used).

wind

tunnel

second

per

150

meters

of

effect

the

while

the

be

may

speed

coefficient.

is

tunnel

the

flying

the

that

so

considering

gram/cm.>,

It

an

of

used,

5 meters

of

testing

information

placed

rocket

model

(or

a lower

and

important

is

(b)

Statement

air

than

airspeed

same

that

to

a

an

generate

only

can

on

cases

two

fluid

model

prototype,

the

of

1.0.

testing.

airspeed

tunnel

the

tnan

aerodynamic

of

accurate

yield the

The

wind-tunnel

as

of

effects

greater

field

decreased

taken

data

Conversely,

other

inertial

the

speed for

is

viscosity

kinematic

if

prototype the

pressurized

which

will

ratio

Reynolds

quarter-scale

a

that

at

numbers

such

used,

times vL

product

while

to

tne

situation.

predominate

1.0,

tunnel

a wind

expresses

Reynolds

instance,

full-scale four

than

are

and

fluid-flow

important

models

which

given

at

is

(a)

Statement

to

viscosity

predominate

in

identical; number

diagram

rocket's

velocity

The

are

Reynolds

velocity

instantaneous

attack".

the

longituay

cases

The

density

its

viscosity

(18° ) is 1.827 x 107+ gran/(cm.-sec.). gram/ (cm.-sec.)

makes

the

value

is

also

of P/M in

known

CGS

as

units

the

equal

poise.

to




that

that

and

corresponds

A response

Shown

80

of

A,

1-

seen

there A,

a

the

for the validity

square

and

«,

constants.

Ay {in equation

o«.,

and

of

the

root of a negative

be both a nonzero

writing for

tine

and

Ww (25)

Ry.

da,/dt,

we

by

and are

a set

setting

obtain

=

dy

FT) Ta Seno - T2

Tate. t TT Leo TT

kind

-

Tb

1s called overdumped;

Like

the

hazardous

its

eritically-damped

response. condition.

also

it

has no overshoot;

a critically-damped

extremely

Az

gives

Theo

13.

response

+

=

,

this

in Figure

Overdamped

than

=

=

o

Gi

large

solution

forn

=0

Vas

was

expressions

(26) T=

of tris

two different

condition

conditions.

A.

or

be

constants

Xxo

Solving

We

the

occur,

is

I Cc moe

the Validity

there

solutions

D.

in

for

requirement that the square root of w ceyutive nunber

occur,

In

ae

+CA,R involving

not

~4

2 cq oh >;

coudition

to be the

gives

equation

dynamical

the

in

tQA Those

- %

Az g + 2%

a

(25)

@

ga

Ae

-

-&

Ss

@,

;

x

2

respons

the

of

constants

time

e

are

Aa

1

th

expressions

these

stituting A

AL

A 2 ra

°

Sub

called

formulae

derivative

The

are

These

With

in the flight path almost ae severe 4 s

overdamping

slowly

overdamping

make

large

resulting

ie

the

sore

decays

features

those

behavior

potion,

from

caanges neutral

slope=xo

o&, (rad)

Oxo

t (sec)

pa

A statically

0+

joefsictent gaaner

13:

Figure con

ditions

to

more of

in

prope rties

the

slowly infinite

{nitial &%. p)

the

Overdamped

e6

beloy,

poth

19:

pb;

Given

initial

of

A

=

Tae

Pigure

are

A,+A,+% \ 2 =

which

from

“T)

yosition =

Oro

t (sec)

and

that does not persist

in Section for all

time

_

-120-

of time t)as shown imagine

the

interval

shorter

and

shorter

becomes

greater

its

to

process

however,

case,

H,

and

the

a

second

response

criterion

transient

yaw

may

of

by

a

which

disturbances

be

defined

as

may

there

obtainable of

are from

singularity

the

the be

An

of

H.

offers

rocket

impulsive

(t

0

= H

rigorous so-called

definitions limiting

impulses),

such

an

understanding

disturbances

on

physical

of

systems.

is an idealization of physical encounter

Area

Strengtn«

F

=

Figure

20:

of

steps

Mg1

and

Mgl»

finite

H

still

in

such

the

duration. for

The

a

in

To

less

The

dyn-cm-sec.

that

(c), the

"strength"

a

step

of

product

of

the

The

time

step

duration

a

to fe) t (sec)

t (sec)

persists

but

iA

Development of the concept of an impulse from a series

of

{mpulse

to

input

ie)

c t (sec)

Ty;

(b)

the

than

limiting

the

impulse

in

(a)

product

has T,

such

case

intensity

--

has

Moi?)

an intensity that

of

inteusity

infinite of

step

is

and

still

this but the

an ictensity 1s

Myo the

equal

to

greater

Mgoto

product

behavior

is

infinitesimal duration

than

--

is

the duration called

H dyn-cm-sec.

0)

tue

of

among

formal

effects

Like

reality. disturbing

impulse

arguments

includes,

to

and

S

2

*

(t = 0)

(which

steps

=

>

H dyn-cm-sec.

strength

input

the

=

functions

never

evaluated.

of

f,(t)

of

can

resistance

an

(t = 0)

necessary

rocket

such

= 0

study

a

to

f,(t)

more the

rocket

this

has by

of

P

at

follows:

O°f;(t) While

given

In

zero

impulse

an

called

2

:

AS} Ms»

thig

"type"

denote

hereafter

shall

is

kind

this

of

function

A forcing

I

which

Mgt,

value:

definite

a

with

infinity

"this"

of

product

the

since

infinity,

2

Y

Ket),

arrive

special

rather

a

considered

be

must

M,

carry

infinity.

is

M,

and

zero

is

t;

that

such

configuration

a

we

¢

5

;

F

6

€9

Input

step

ultimately

will

we

conclusion,

log {cal

If

becoming

product

the

constant.

remains

rectangle,

the

of

area

the

“action, Noy

persist sts e

step

that

greater in such & Way

and

f

Mgt).

1s

applied

the

of

magnitude

the

as

forcing

area

the !

whi

during

this

whose

which

ne

time

of

of

rectangle

a

forms

20,

in Figure

n

representatio

graphical

The

interya)

some

after

again

to zero

“steps down"

but ratner

0,

©

the

of

inputs the

other

things,

precision of

theory

is not

impulsive

step,

the

impulse

You know very well moments

of

that

infinite

Paed

t== 0,

©

DQ

>

we

-122~ley,

and

duration,

however,

The

response

moment

M

of

wheel

the

flywheel

applied

is

to

of

for

a

input

our

of

Figure

5.

moment

the

of

I

to

of

angular

acceleratio,

that,

for

a

constant

which

angular

is

position

4s

thus

The

an

from

the

original

rotative

now,

that

the

t approaches

constant

at

wheel

the

by

conditions

the

zero

value

woment

remain

in H.

during constant

H I

such The tne at

M approaches a way

that

angular

tue

velocity

interval tne

infinity

value

t will,

and

product

Mt

imparted under

the

to these

the

of

angular

velocity

application

of

strength

H will

of

the

to vO

flywoeel

azpear

impul

icstantan-

se.

zero

damping

cause

an angular velocity

H

I,

~

instantaneously,

to

will

be

moments

while

zero.

in

any

the

Does way

angular the

alter

displacement

presence the

at

of nonzero

state

of

time

corrective

the

rocxet

effect

due

at

t = 0? it

Moment

the of

And, the

with

is

stability,

occured;

zero.

remains

finite

of the yawing rocket is Precisely analozou:as, dk damping and corrective moments are both z ero:

ne the

arise

static

moment

reached

is

tae a

time

ax

yet time

the

Well, 2

Suppose,

4H

case

ca cause

to

impulse

is mM 42 a= iFt

since

decrease,

problem

provided

and displacement

to at

equal

angular

.

diacement will

s

eously

to

resulting

OWever

3T t

Limiting

velocity

Mt

the

_

impulge

the

w= and

h

,

11

“= the

of

by

yt is eiven

when

somewhat

types

Recall

resulting

the

ytually

other

to

of

t,

displacement

rocket

examoles

conce

discussion in

angular

liftorr,

during

consideration

a

inertial time

is

responses

the

illustrated

as

frictionless

taan

gne

im.ulsive.

virtually

{impulsive

the

of

the

from

are

staging

during

Ordep

high

a

direction

contact

launcher

to

to

residue

solid

of

facilitate

to

return

we

let

the

are

an

grasp

to

flywheel

the

to

order

In

imputs.

of

response

difficult

more

in

waich

functions

forcing

fluctuutions

encountered

disturbances

and

impulse

due

arising

moments

nozzle,

an

ejection

oblique

line,

thrust

a

Momentary

accuracy.

of

as

treated

ve

can

short

of

disturbance

strong

any

duration;

zero

{ntensity

is

hence

as

finite

there

does

arise

the

of

at t 20

moment

increment

therefore

any

be

cannot

displacement

corrective

velocity

and

there

angular

no

the

although

angular

that

clear

to

can produce

no

simultaneously this

{moulse,

the

has

is itself

moment

4 damping due

rocket

to

change

in eitner zero

amount

tb e angular velocity in a angular displacement or presence of aerodynamic It thus turns out that the time. ect

the initial eff Moments does not modify This effect produces an impulsive input.

upon

the

the

rocket

following

set

of

ewe

-e

-124initial

conditions:

Xxo

(37»)

2

=

O

a,

(37a)

(rad)

of

the

Unlike

no

xo

a

with

equations

response

equations

in

phase

angle @

=

=0

and

anrckan

Applying

(19).

through

(15)

the

rocket

initial

the

following

(37)

results

in

the

initial

amplitude:

by

given

is

conditions

values

for

(0)

A= Ty The given

characteristic

This

to

an

impulsive

disturbance

equations

(16)

is

by

(38) where

response

kx W

=7Re and

motion

The

equations

is

D are shown

Aim determined in

Figure

critically-damped

(22)

and

Wk

(23).

by

impulse

In

and

(17).

21.

this

response

Case

we

igs

have

described

by

then

=

7]

Underdamped

gne

angular

jnitial

sinfarctan (sy

arctan(-)

figure

yaw angle

by

given

those

underdamped

an

of

impulse-response

equations

the

@ homogeneous

a4

time.

of

values

tm

definition

its

from

see

:

the

speaking,

(37).

The

given

positive

conditions:

initial

of

set

special

can

you

actually

is

response

impulse

all

for

zero

is

as

for

H - Borctan(¥) Aum = Tage

it

with

associated

properly

More

t>0-

zero,

has

input

impulse

for

is

itself

impulse

the

step,

response

particular

complete

ra

response

particular

the

=

attained,

res

velocity

;

Ponse to an impulse of st rength H in yaw. imparted

by the

impulse



the

maxinum

and the time at which it occurs are sho wn.

-126-

Ou

H

A,

where a

again

Dis

(24)

at

a

y

damped

to

Tesponse

an

impul

the initial yaw rate, the mazin

which

the

maximum

yaw angle

_

.

occu

se of yaw

um

strength H

an

and



Ts.

= a

Slope

results

the

cives

Critically

:

showing

time

conditions

initial

the

22

in yaw me

obeys

forcing

impulsive

pigure

22.

Figure

by

jllustrated

Applying

(26).

through

response

imoulse

The

(16)-

from

resul tins

motion

equations

these

is

rocket

critically-damped

eouations

equation

py

given

Overdamped

to

form

the

assumes

motion

— pt H L A T hx =

(39) of

=i

characteri stic

the

and

o, (rad)

A,= 0

Axm-

H

=

A

C,

rocket

will

to

tne

being

value reduce

of

dependence of

Iy-

the

It

equations

and

would

severity

of

the

(38)

initial

thus a

is of

inertia

of

moment

seem

rocket's

inversely rocket

the

through amplitude

that

a

impulse

velocity

angular

initial

the

disturbance

impulsive

an

disturbed,

that

shows

(37b)

from

23.

Figure

in

longitudinal

4nverse

t.

(40)

large

Iz

proportional

is

response.

oo

|\T2

xm ~ 14-7)

on

the

desirable We

can

time

at

to

the

which

deflection

%-T2

Overdamped

showing

angle

an

- TmAnlu/2)

nm”

yaw,

is

the

occurs

also

response

{nitial

critically

for the

is

which

reveal

factors

(e)**-(@)™

= H%T2

23:

Figure

illustrated

resulting

a.

by

=

Equation

tm

overdamped

An

(25). described

impulse-response

an

exhibit

equation

by

determined

are

Tz

thus

Xx

(40)

as

I, (%,-%2) and

where

t ec)

£0 x rej

Tr

HT,

=

A,

3

(%\-T2)

Ie

'

TT

XT

more

maximum sooner

damped

yaw

yaw and

to

rate,

angle

the

maximum

of strength H in yaw

is attained.

its value

responses

gradual.

an impulse

angle,

and

the

The maximum

is smaller than

is the

and the return to zero yaw

case

i ~129-

-128-

. »~*dim

~

(41a)

Hg

the

,-bt

H eo

critically-damped

him Ax

an

Finally, equation

zero

way 28

O

that

.

motion

we

from

Sgt

gives

us

&

»~% , KHT

HEC

C-

_

= you

(43b)

you

will

trigonometric

can

obtain,

after

>

“,

8 ome

7

expressions

D,

%,

into

make

the

following

motion

= 0

motion,

underdamped

For

critically-damped

For

overdamped

an

of

I,

applicable

(20),

seem

at

first

are

desirable

only

in

the

not

is

in

the

which

whole

the

story,

damping

2,TL g= ~ 2Ne We see

that

an

Ta Particular,

qd amped

responses

increase

in

(41d),

Secti on (42b),

>

and

w x me

of

case

@

in

I; —— increases

underdamped

for

is

that

if we

given

lurge

x

xem °

values

xotion.

examine

equation

as

ly invari

ably

reduces

the

damping

ratio.

ad or criticallyIz, can cause overdampe have already been shown to be undesirable

increasin g

(which

in

I, decreases GeCreases

indicate

to

however,

ratio



=|

derived

in

increase

might

results

manipulation

changes in Iz have no

otion,

motion,

same

ecguations

discoveries:

mot

P

on Xxkm-

fF ron

.

equations

increase

an

expo ponential

in much the

(=)2

the

and

of

called

ec,

~

(~)

For

These

the

erse

algebraic

substitute T,

P als °

rithn 8,

- 2

7

TCG)

Caritim of" "

inv

functions,

which

This overdamped

if

effect

= TL.D2 of

we

xem W

have

0

case

(40)

for

is

-AH%2

and

of

;

lop°

atural

mathematical

the

are

»

"nat

i

and

the

:

the

Natural logari

parentheses.

tables

3.1.1

dim lanctan (¥)]

= +

in

27°

(43b)

H

(42b)

which

_

Wt

cot

for

junctions and may be found in tables arrangeded ase)

_

*

Ty

a (42a)

pt

DH =>

_

in

stands

enth

ote

so

—~Dancten(F)



n

tos

Now

X com = iw

For

of

y

ocarithms

yaperta

is

case

(75)

m

(41b)

,->*

condition

the

imposing

underdamped

wh Tay t

phe quantity

of

obtain

we

which

from

+

Wh

value

{

:

equation.

resulting from

by

"ln" n”

notation

the

ee

DH _ Tw

the

on

velocity

angular

and

resultin g

equation

The

the

satisf. y

will

that

t

zero

to

smallest

the

determin jing

be

computed

wnere

ee ee

dx,/dt

they

wuic hb

These

a“

To

~

ae



setting

at

t

of

maxima,

+

_

(43)

Lr(Bx,

wet,



I

Se

nee

values

can

occur,

displacement

2

the

and

onse

jmpulse-resp

of

case

eac h

with

associated

max imum

the

deriving

by

thoroughl y

more

angular

respon

the

of

severity

the

go verning

quantities

the

investigate

-131-

~130-

overdamping

against

importance

significant

of

4n

which

In

the

the a

properties roll

this

of

of

input

an

to

rate

section

of

the

positive

static

to

going

an

I

of

response

a

be

the

situation

a

significant

of

is

alone

of

stability

creates

soon

interest. about

talking

fi(t

xit) theInto

for

yawing

form

the

_

4+

Ci Xx =

solution

.

Again

Wet

to this equation is imown to be

The

rocket

motion of

the

of

sim (wet

Ar

=

Xx

(44)

~

form

the

rocke t motor

of tue

the expression Given above ¢ for © us the differentia) equati on

AX SOR 2 dk

0,

4

phe particular

the

having

rocket

phenomena

1°)

of the

form

are

benavior

nowever,

time)

with

away

particular

the

for

respons e

particular

the

recainder

zero

dies

dampinz,

finite

nature,

(which,

response

charact2ristic and

periodic

and

prolonged

a

of

cases

In

motion.

resulting

the

of

moments

disturbing

the

where

I. aa?

taat

character

the

determining

in

> ddx

were

in

oscillatioc n

nature.

response

particular

tue

and

response

homogeneous

the

both

-

responses

such

was

cases

these

in

rocket

wits

discontinuous

or

transient

bas

model

a

of

behavior

The

of

functions

forcing

to

sections

previous

the

In

conce rned

were

we

7

Gives

(13)

quation

Forcing

Sinusoidal

to

R esponse

State

Steady

3.1.4

;

.

gubstituting

forcing.

{mpulsive

pepresentation

to

sensitivity

rocket's

ta e

reduce

to

and

"flutter" er

aerodynamic

baysical

suara

to

both

helps

inertia

of

mo ment

longitudinal

large

ne

responds

disturbance.

"leads"

response

sinusoidal is

frequency

The

amplitude

the

forcing

time

The

radians.

the

whose

own

its

to

+9) forcing

with

identical

to

is

different,

function

of the

derivatives

by

a

a sinusoidal the

frequency and

however,

phase

response

angle

thus

of

described

ee

a

Such

7

tarust

are

response

result

transient is

phenomena

identical

obtained

from

been

has

to

the

going

have

the on

died

based

away,

that

so

such

the

alone.

response

on

that

this

sufficiently

time

a

for

particular

an analysis

assuuption

an

lone

complete Tne

assumption

1s

=~

dhe _ dk?



Ar

We

~ Wt

;

The values of A, and *Xpressions

for

xX

(wet

cot

Ar @ and

,

am

+)

(wet +

are determi its

time

ned

) by

.

on

substituting

derivatives

the

int o the differential

nee

all

input

based

ee

that

be

will

LAx

ee

“sinusoidal”

sim Wek

+

analysis

Ag

arn

The

=

epee

fy (t)

Ce

as

design

desirable

a

is

; the

in

~

le

I,

instabilit y

to 8 Sinusoidal forcing,

Fesponge

=


-

c=

the

upper

expressions

for

the

+ eet

WwW

-

(Y+2

This

behavior. must are form

be to

which

determine is

carefully be

avoided.

a

these

of

rather

carried For

give

tricky

out the

2

+

step

case

Ne rae

———

2

ZX*w?

awe

x2 Wz? (Y+z- S42) +z

jos.

us

the

se"4? )* +ZX

by

step

Xw,=0,

correct in

procedure if the

2

zw

LC (Y+z-

must

22")

E GE 6 e/(rr 8 Get) Ll

We

root

of

of

algebra:

the

nuuber

this

a

positive

In

number.

a .4Uantity

thus obtained

is

squared,

is cacea, quantity

alwuys all

the and

the

caowiedce

is Levevosably

here,

example

our

V(Y+z)

limiting case

owe

assume

= .*

=

,

Now

}Y+z|

=

discussing

to

the

If

we

case furtner have

-(Y+Z)

if

statically-stable in

which

(Y+

Z)

rockets,

Y is negative

stipulate

that

the

roots

value

of

(¥+2Z)"

(Y+Z)0, but

In

always

“the

|Y+zZ|

and

the

= |Y+z|



inconsistencies roots

when

bear in wind

of the oricinal

sign

algebraic

we must

complete

2

27

x*a)

rule

results

lost. fhe final result of such a sequence of operations is the absolute value of the original quantity, whica is by definition

in

sign

the

these

4

2u)2> [eee

we Vf

of

for

equation:

X*W

square

or

the

choose

to

obliged

Choosing

b@.

in

following

the

have

A=-\

os

it

sign

are

we

simplifying

following

sign

a

chosen

In

=

upper

the

choose

can

Having

terus.

root

however,

we

that

in

ae,

quartic

the

of

roots

we

(r+z- BOP ez we

in

root

have

we

(53b),

we

+ ZK

(ye e- A)

a

here

square

the

for

in

z

-&

option

an

is

there

Now

Stay

obtained

as

»?

for

2 wy? \2

+ Lb

Yt2

Awe

CE -

ata Solving

equation

quadratic

a

as

solved

be

give

to



for

can

It

equation.

biquadratic

we is, be

are 0,

referring is

always

positive).

underdamped,

we

will

ee oe 2) ee

-151-

go

that

if

Wz70,

correctly

statically-stable zero.

For

the

in

opposite

the

limit

limit,

that

of of

W2z Ipa5We

be

seen

that

¥

4

2

W

4

Ie

as

°F terms,

collecting

~

Ir

7

relation

this

Iet We" 41,4

C2* Te> wat 41

be

can

inequality

the

express

can

his

*

Ig W2 Ty

we

relative

rocket

model

subside,

roll-coupled

for

stable

positively

41.

We

i

has

motions is

must

be

of

oscillations

the

do not.

to

wants

designer

or

2

2

relation

there

the

eyes

about

response

yawing

that

range

this

in

is

Co? Ip? War

initial

spinning

rocket

a model

nonzero to

to

response

homogeneous

Undamped

solving

by

explicit

It

rolling

which

motion

characteristic

Figure

is

condition

27.

conditions

other

rocket

the

I,

and

Cp,

under

The

general

Figure

in

positively-stable

coupled,

of

case

A representative

damping.

has

effectiveness

tae

reduce

to

serves

coupling

roll

that

so

elapsed,

most

tae

time

sufficient

a

after

a

As be

will

mode

slow

the

oscillation

the

oscillation.

decoupled

that

means

this

of

a

such

than

slowly

more

decays

8Ss

mode.

oscillation

4 decouvled

than

rapidly

more

decays

mode

fast

fast

the

than

mode

decaying

slowly

a more

be

tperefore

|

a

have

2

made

more

-161-

Slope = 2yo

ppon ——

fe)

a, (rad)

Kot

examining

(55),

= t (sec)

we

the

see

original

that

this

is

expression Just

the

for

“F

given

requirement

in equation

that

C,>O

cnaracteristic

motion,

whether

Fe 2

fe)

ay (rad)

4

27:

Characteristic

damping

and

yaw

and

pitch,

the

properties

oscillations and

true

nonzero

roll

showing of

the

eventually

response rate

the

to

decay

to

a

general

relation

response.

of

of

model

rocket

initial

the the

yawing

zero

and

the

finite

conditions

initial

Both

with

slow

mode

approaches

zero

in

conditions and

model

to

pitching

regains

straight

fast

0,

= O

so

flight.

as

just

stable,

remains

rocket

the

if

it

°F *

t

aztrz

approaches

mode

indefinitely;

deflected

0;

As

rolling.

not

Co*Ie

Wa

constunt

of

+

41,7

the

inverse

time

the

angular

deflection

flight

moment is

were

slow

At

Zero. it

neutrally

is

negative,

becomes

that

¥

of

the

of

decoupled

the

of

damping

the

twice

or

the

of

constant

time

from

positive,

is

Wz

if

the

of

the

of

tnat

while

inverse

The

0,/Iy»

that

but

oscillation,

above

from

moment

frequency

angular

the

— ins

of

negative.

approaches

mode

spinning

corrective

the

as

1s,

zero),

value

a

is

is

2

Ig we 4It

toward

approaches

Wz

222

(that

mode

if

rocket

2

Wz

fast

below Figure

2

Ie"

C2

“412

decreases

coefficient

t (sec)

2, x +

toward

decreases \

a

tL 2

the

As the value of

about its centerline. Slope = Qyo

or not

stable

positively

for

required

thus

1s

stability

static

Positive

increases

coefficient

rolling

There

or

of

with is




upper

the

integrand

D=

case

not to

in

are

and

enclosed

of

in

in

Table

Figure

a

17.

the

Ua.

whole to AB

mass

surface,

from

velocity

Assigning

control

the contributes positive

flowing

the

momentum

2. that

the

to

momentum

flux

through

total

--

far

segment

requires

the

space

contribution

to

rect-

a

problems)

over

value

control

the

by

undisturbed

x-direction.

the

in

sufficiently

moreover,

negative

by as

is

their

symmetry, the

as

constant

consider

in

fluid-flow

443,53,

region

in

conservation

limit

ek

h

drag

force the

D

be

control

(U.?-ut-U2- ue)dy

of integration may is

expression

obtain

a

surface

of

plate,

the

expressed

p=$b(

(70)

such

the

drag

or

The

This

6 = 0.664

equal

surface,

in

flowing

imaginary

points,

momentum

region

thickness

surrounded

plate

analysis

to

lies

surface,

(69)

=

parallel

in

fluid

the

skin-friction

a flat

(an

corner

forces

exactly

y=o

in the

A,B),

wall

in

its

boundary-layer

the

consider

used

by

of the

@ to

surface

Momentum

§Un?@= $) u(Un-u)dy 6 =

relate

Pressure

that

or

(68)

rate

a quantity

or (66)

due

potential

define

concept The

may

manner:

following

the order

we

1/8 (54).

equation

by

defined

identified

(15). In

approximately

Now

be exactly identical,

turbulent

of

cases

in

momentum

certainly

18

flat

distributions

velocity

the

zero,

to

equal

the

the

for

while

it),

through

flow

fluid

at

that

than

less

be

must

pipe

the

of

end

downstream

gnis Upstrean

zero

for y > h;

be changed

to

infinity,

as

hence

u (Uso > u) ay applies

to a plate wetted

on only

the drag for a plate wetted on both sides,

one

side;

we evaluate

to

TABLE

2 control

surface

Zi

Se

Rate

n

Cross-Sectio

LO

-b

4 By

the

("(Ue, co -u) dy

-S 5 J U,,( U,-u)ay

total

of

surface

control

turbulent

h

MELT

_—-

Se

“ay

-Sb

VIII)

LTT

5 u2ay

—-x

h

————h

Eh Foy

0

———

'

a

%

Volume

net

flow

=

total

rate

= drag

0

moment

mm flay

—__

flow

surface

and

momentum

pictured

skin-friction

drag.

in

flux

Figure

accounting 17,

for

use

associateg with in

caleulaty aUhng

Figure

17:

due

a

to

angle

of

Oontrol turbulent

attack.

7

ZE

ulay)

nn) —

Po

Veo

= control

2:

j

-—

h

-b f) udy

BB)

Table

Fo), Ue iW

VITTITTTL

y

0

b { Udy

aay

sum

X- Direction tn

ie)

h

AB

Flow

of

surface boundary

F-— Us

for

calculating

layer

over

the

a flat

friction

plate

at

irag zero

-3382p=Sb Jue

not

b is

merely

replaced

by

the

integral

may

Second,

on

case

in which

body,

leading

the

from

extending

region

the

on

circular wall

the

to

skin

friction

edge

to

that

particular

momentum

(72)

U26

This

expression

equations

(73) boundary

(66)

and

is

identical

and

be

recalled

(71);

to

hence

the

we

integral

o=)

that

appearing

return layer

velocity

»

now on

a

boundary

(6)

have

layers

2 ()

the

be of the

The

law"

the

pipe

flow

in the

form

we

the

turbulent

empirical

results

adopt

"1/7th-power

the

for

case,

can

results

form,

this along

and

represent

relationship a flat

thus them

of experiments

one

plate

curve

requires in

that

turbulent

plotted

all

flow

in dimensionless

all.

with

turbulent

boundary

the

shearing

stress

can

thickness

now

be

obtained

in terms

of

at

§ by direct

the

from equations

integration

$

te (I~ Gz) ay

© 5)" [I-A ly (* (E)hay-( (Bray = 25-75

= 755 if

we

a7

pth

Combining

equation

(73)

with

respect

to

x

we

= tw = sult

equations

ys

Substituting

(79)

(76) and (77) then ylelds

Here gt (78)

Er

into

(75),

we noe

= 0.0225 (2)'

4n explicit expression for § as a function of x can now be obtained

layers

differentiate

obtain

(B)

|

profiles

same

coordinates

in

From

of

T.

laminar

velocity

plate.

consideration

y\%

Un

in

explicit

flat

distribution u

(74)

an

that

Then

in

Now

to

shown

(74):

u (U.-u)dy

yro

(70)

turbulent

the

= §

it will

D= be U6 We

4s

°

(65)

also

relation

thickness

poundary-layer

u

equation

have

the

y 4 = 0.0225 (z) U.. $

Te

ou

station.

Now from

pipes

obeys

(75)

{The

due

drag

the

give

will

it

x

station

any

at

evaluated

be

the

body

cylinder,

the

of

circumference

the

cylindrical

a

of

case

the

in

plate;

flat

a

only

body,

here,

cylindrica,

symmetrical

any

to

made

be

should

integrals

is applicable

(70)

equation

First,

4n

these

concerning

remarks

Two

=u) dy

to

(63)

for

Mercer. B = 1700

(function

22 can be used directly

6.

MThree-Dimensional Qorrections to the Flat-Plate

Approximate

laminar 4)

to find

coefficients for use in the method described

Skin-Friction

109,

Section

22, along with the pure

from equations

5X

for model

by Mark

(101)

2

conservative,

number

gathered

equation

@ in Pigure

pure

3:6

should

value

case,

rocket,

Since

matter the

no

a model

for

drag

a particular

Since

1700.

range

3 x 10° 8700

in

calculation

about

and

Section

for

for

of

(101)

known.

determined

average

1 x 106 3300

equation

must

corresponding

in

derived

B

5 x 109 1700

Ro,44

skin-friction skin-friction

of

(15):

to

of

1s plotted

B_

turbulent

order

rockets

- (Cé) iam | coefficient

(Ry)%

3 x 105 1050

quantity

6

- (Ce)iam_|

skin-friction

(Ry) 1.328

below

Rerit :

The

(100)

0-074

=

values

listed

assume

Letting

(86)

are

making

(99)

are

(C#)iam

the

or

we

(1020)

In

|

friction.

skin-friction

(Ceeun

layer

same is

_

(1028)

approximate

reduction

boundary

drag

decrease

from

introduces

the

turbulent

plate

assumed

way

if

the

be

region

the

Veo b Xcrit [ce eury ~ (Cian

2nd

change

laminar

just

for

The

(Of)turp

the

drag

can

AD= -£

where of

edge.

all

flat

boundary

turbulent

the

point,

transition

the

behind

that,

the

Coefficients

methods have been developed for estimating

-359-

tne effects friction of

an

pe

used

for

of three-dimensionality on the values of the skin-

coefficients

approximate

to

method

correct

application

derived

for the flat

described

in

two-dimensional

to

plate.

Reference

The 9,

results

which

can

skin-friction

coefficients

surfaces,

presented

three-dimensional

are

pelow-

3.6.1 Figure

with

Ronit

22:

boundary

Skin

friction

layer

= 5 X 105

coefficient

transition,

(corresponding

based

to

for

on

flow

the

B = 1740

over

a

assumption

in equation

flat

For

plate

of

(101)).

held

Body

laminar

with

its

Corrections

boundary-layer

axis

parallel

friction

coefficient

over

the

length

given

same

(103)

2

(0c+),,,

In

a

previous

of

0.00382

number

of

is

over

a

stream,

circular the

cylinder

increase

of a two-dimensional

approximately

by

in

plate

skin-

having

(9)

= aie

example,

we

determined

laminar

flow

1.206

x 109.

For

ratio

at

over

10

=

Ibex lo7*

skin-friction

the

a

a flat

a model

of

(Crom

adjusted

the

that

for

to-diameter

The

to

flow

same

skin-friction

plate

rocket

body

Reynolds

coefficient

at

coefficient

a Reynolds with

number,

a lengthwe

obtain

is thus

= 328 . 2k ‘ a = (Cediom t UNC Ham = “aan * ARy = 003986 (Ce with of

equation

(103)

accounting

for

@ 4.4%

increase

in

the

value

Cr.

In the

coefficient

case

of turbulent

is found from (9)

flow,

the increase

in skin-friction

-361-

=360-

02

(204)

(205) In

over found 10

coefficient

a flat to

and

plate

be

same

Then

the

at

a

will

completely

Assuming

be

that

we

of 1.206

have

for

the

boundary

skin.

layer

x 106 was

a length-to-diameter the

ratio

skin-friction

coefficient

-3

Now

Cy = 2 Ce the

to

the

increase

cylinder

equation

flat-plate for

the

the

value

--

laminar

magnitudes

on

(105)

accounting

for

a bit

than

case.

will

be

less

In

used

Section

to

constant-diameter 3.6.2

Fin

A model

rocket

be

represented

as

of

the

airstream

468 higher

than

finite

thickness.

This

to

the

thickness

and

c

Then

for

fin

is

tube

the

percentage

corrections the

from

of

inorease

these

skin-friction

sections

of

the

a model

(108) For

drag

rocket.

a

is

seen

about of

fin

generally

a fin the

the

1s sometimes

The

with

not

average

no

thin

side

colloquially

flow,

force

enough

tangential

a symmetrical

undisturbed

produces

quite

D

(or

called)

at

Section

and

zero

‘The

angle

as

area

will

model

t denotes

coefficient,

effects,

rocket

fin

introduced

shall In

fin maximum

thickness

based

we

on

fin

planform

area,

obtain

having

a thickness

ratio

of

(108)

by the use of equation

have

that

occasion

section

to

also,

return

to

procedures

formulae

these for

converting

drag coefficients based on body tube lateral

planform be

where

1e proportional

10%.

6.

section

fin

a fin of

t

we

skin-friction

"lift", (9).

in

for the air to negotiate

= AC (1+ 2)

be

velocity

airfoil

even

to

drag

correction to

increase

in turn,

by

t

thickness

typical

the

0.05

fin

for

Cg

the

b

the

Again,

plate.

the

force

6,

determine

body

of attack when side

1/3

increase

t/o,

caused

1s proportional

chords

fin

denotes

pressure

increment,

ratio

Ac

Qorrections

a flat

that

1.3%

dynamic

required

is

= . 0045593

a

in

velocity

corrected with

in friction drag with thickness

increment

4n flow

of

107°

cA + aa Cia

(Ce eure =

recalled

turbulent

number

number,

=5.43x

adjusted

it

a Reynolds

Reynolds

eure

(0Ce

example, for

0.0045.

the

(106)

is

area,

reference

= ~ (Rg)

turbulent-flow

friction

plate,

a flat

drag coefficient of a flat plate wetted on both sides, planform area (area of one side only) used ae the

friction with the

1.6x1073 (L/d)

(ACs)

our

Ce)turk for

+074/RyX6

=

(Or)turp

since

or,

(A/d)

(ACE) = or

area

presented.

to

coefficients

based

on maximum

area

frontal

i

ae

36}

-362-

4.

4.1

drag the

over

integral

forces

acting

motion;

that

(you

the

body

surface

of

directly

may

unit

opposite

Section

direction

of

2

as

the

pressure

of

components

the

the

in

the

rocket's

is

useful

integral which over

the

to

Figure divide

over

the

be

phenomenon

and

no

with

launch

boundary

layer

presence

of

inserted,

drag.

In

forebody,

against

the

the

event

airflow

--

is

will

of

the

into

as

the

base

it the

drag,

the

(pressure

the

intimately

In

general,

streamlined

fin

profile,

be

rocket,

result

separation

engine

casing

component

flow

of

separation of

drag

larger

unavoidable

the

large

pressure

considerably

blunt of

the

the

of due

to

must

pressure

occurs

on

surfaces

directed

forebody

can

begin

on

with

and

concerning

the

not or

is take

the

into

4.2

the

and

layer

remains

attached

This

study

phenomenon

important

question,

of pressure

in

Section

and

discusses

in

to

1s noted

that

this

exhaust

of

on

(if

Mark

Section

used

effects

of

launch lug

is

the

engine

sources

the 4.3

which

it

either

laminar

this

Section

although

3 for

prevention

to the

rockete:

base.

skin-friction

formed.

most

model

Boundary-Layer

The

and

pressure

two

first

of

of

drag.

the

account

influence

mechaniem

1s essential

expression

presented,

base

information

the

empirically-derived

drag

the

the

there 1s very little quantitative

well-constructed one)

times

a discussion

concerning

has

of

separation

Unfortunately,

available

several

understanding

4.2.

foredrag),

associated

an

we

integral

separation.

which

extensive

--

notation

first,

second,

fins

because

1s

a relatively that

and and

nose,

This

rear

opening

however

called

4.4;

the

perhaps

drag,

data

surface

analysis,

rocket,

body

drag

foredrag.

creates

the

base

the

of

parts:

boundary-layer

the

to

two

drag

streamlined

from

purposes

the

4.3.

pressure

of

a

lug,

pressure

the

of

Section

to

regard

into

the

rocket

Section

the

rocket

the

in

For

of

in

normal

memory

integral

area

of

in

everywhere

your

this

remainder

existence

a

large,

boundary-layer

model

again).

base

The

for

11

discussed

to be discussed with

n is

refresh

to

will

of

drag

vector

wish

consulting

the

previously

is,

by

the

defined

s

where

than

was

Dp = (f poos(n,V)ds

(109)

quite Since

Introduction

Pressure

be

pe

Pressure Drag

4.4

Mercer's

the

evaluate

base

formula

stabilizing

the

base

the

does

fins

drag.

Separation coefficients

turbulent

flow

to the

assumption

is

which

were

presuppose

solid

surface

generally

valid

derived

that

the

on which for

in

Section

boundary

it ie

a flat

plate,

as the pressure gradient along the plate's surface dp/dx is zero; but in regions of increasing pressure (dp/dx positive, &

this not

point

happens, applicable To

& blunt

it will

and

the

the

break away from

skin-friction

beyond

illustrate

body,

gradient)

boundary

layer

to follow the contour of the body surface

may be unable & certain

pressure

adverse

so-called

the

this

point

the

surface.

of

Section

coefficients of

phenomenon,

beyond When 3 are

separation. we

examine

the

flow

past

such ag the oircular cylinder shown in Pigure

-364-

from

Bernoulli's

equation,

between

A and

B and

thickness

of

dn

element

it

is

in

virtually

the

exterior

moves

from

the

increasing,

then

decreasing.

of

energy

that it

a

had

in

inviscid

fluid at

subjected

the

kinetic element

to

overcome

side

of

will

is

actually

25,

which

the

then

process shows

of

is

no

C with

the

which

not

have

pressure

at

the

the

some

point

influence

its

the

of

of

elements of

Hence

kinetic

the

energy

downstream

will

pressure

motion

much

B.

motion

the

its

exterior

consequences

velocity

its

velocity

consume

A to

on

predicts

fluid

sufficient

gradient

direction

against

from

first

fluids

same

forces

travelling

energy

dissipation

perfect

frictional

and

the

there

as

pressure

cylinder,

however,

under

how

at

the

layer,

will

and

of

theory

arrive

wall

reverse

rear

so

be

gradient, that

it

airstream.

are

profiles

depicted in

the

in

Figure

boundary

near

layer

the

Flow

Inviscid

cylinder

circular

a

about

theory

("poteatial")

transverse

held

predicts

tae

taat

the

to

flow

of the cylinder will be accelerated from point

surface

from

point

B and

decelerated

again

boundary

layer

develops

inflection

pressure

gradient

to

station.

kinetic

in

is,

taken

the

airstream.

the

same

of

boundary

positive

moving

the

in

cylinder,

the

Because

gained

the

Acting

4t

the

large

near

arrested.

This

to

energy

the

will

Within

are

to

flow,

element

A.

an

front

because change

continual

a

is

the

at

flow

flow,

and

23:

Figure

is

that

over

pressure

constant

exterior

the

in

undergoes

distribution, as

layer

pressure

the

to

equal

the

downstream

flow;

fluid

the

layer

boundary

the

in

station

any

at

the

distribution

0, = 1 - 4sin@?)

real

in

layer

boundary

the

upon

along

pressure

24 as the curve

(which appears in Figure impressed

increase

theoretical

This

Q.

B to

from

surface

a corresponding

pressure

static

in

decrease

4

is

there

with

accordance

In

C.

point

B to

point

decelerated

are

and

B,

point

A to

point

from

accelerated

are

elements

fluid

the

fluid,

"perfect"

a

of

flow

inviscid

the

In

23.

an

between

B and

0,

and

B to point

C.

In

due

separation

to

the

actuality, the

adverse

occurs

at

8.

A

|

Oe -367are

I

/

|__

a ee

-2

Cp=1-4sin’e

altered

near

nas

a

stable

of

the

of

increasing

to

be

full,

60°

8S

i)

flow

about

curve

obtained

from

potential

number

Reynolds

of

curves

average

with

6

x

(based

on

between

a line

drawn

23

and

a

periphery.

point

line

drawn

Point

C to p=

from from

Bin

180°.

is

data

taken

The

diameter). the

the

Figure

cylinder axis 23

to thus

at

the

Pis

angle

subcritical

forward

au)

(y



Figure

the

on

the =

90° t)

cylinder and

to and

the

general a

rapid e).

of the

c,

which

equations

boundary-layer

separation, conditions

and on

moves

well

into

particles

velocity

gradient

the wall

has

condition

upstream

the

at

a zero

zero

region

the

wall

develops at

consequently

of

normal

Mathematically

of

separation their

a

so

made

thick,

in

the

the

vortex

in the

boundary-layer

becomes were

point,

motion,

of fluid

(equations

layer"

a,

profile

the

reverse

layer

flow

the

expressed

accumulation

The

a "boundary the

of

the

point

layer

begin an

the

wall.

lost

all

velocity

as

0

increase

assumptions

layer

=

at

boundary

velocity

The is

The

the

nearest

a

wall

c,

has

wall

Downstream nearest

point

the

As

however, at

and

profile

c.

momentum.

at

(110)

angle

other

until,

of fluid

gradient

the A in

to

4ts

separation.

velocity point

point

layer

of

pressure,

retarded

The

number

point

corresponds

compared

and

to

axis

any

theoretical

Reynolds

supercritical

the

and

10

pressure

displayed

theory

experimental

cylinder

10°

3x

flow

of

The

cylinder.

circular

a

in

coefficient

variation

experimental

and

Theoretical

24:

Figure

point

separation

inflection 180°

120°

a

layers is

boundary

thickness in fact,

38 and 39)

of

apply

resort

had

be

the

the

only

to

of

the

series

of

photographs

from

and

@ original

boundary-

and

to exist. to

the

experiment

rear

body

up

fluid

leads

are no longer valid

approximations

must

layer (points

as such can no longer be said

the

formed,

that

derivation

of

which

to the

Hence,

point

determine flow

has

Separated. The

4),

made

the

actual

cylinder.

remarkable

by Prandl

and

development In

Plate

4a,

Metjens of the

(Reference

separation flow

in

has

at

12),

the

just

Plates

rear

begun;

4a

through

illustrates of

a circular

the

boundary

layer is very thin, and conditions conform very closely to ideal,

Plate the

4: onset

gradient.

Flow of

around

boundary

the layer

rear

end

of

separation

a blunt due

to

body, an

illustrating

adverse

pressure




Jave Of of Javelin with airfoiled fins

| |

of Javelin with square edged

—_— [>

BC-70

[__1-"-——

BC-78

0.41

'S

0.42

12

_—>

BC-76

0.42

2.14



BC-74

0.43

>———~ | )

Hemisphere

ee

(0.70)

>

|

cone

0.59

45°

cone

0.61

Sligh lightly

| rounded Flat

—_§_

coefficient

nosecon one

shapes 3 p

a2 nd

aiagrams

of

nose

for the used by

of

tne

fins

the

shapes the

fins.

of ~ +,“9@

r Profiles

shapeg

each

Figures

Javelin mTy

8.

rst

tests

(designations

Centuri

Javelin

using

4 fin

yp

column

beg

Engineering

Cor

rocket).

nose

in

Snape,

Parentheses

were

obt

drag

coefficient

a

2.24

0.87 1.32

p

Drag

2.16 _

60°

:

21:

214

0.51

——_—

[>

(2.35

0.51

BC-79



EE

[

2.10

BC-72

[>

[

0.41

y

Figure

|

|

2.24

|

2.51 , ,

2.77

nw +4

| ;

Q\r-

Nosecone sha pe

Figure

nose

32:

shape

Variation

with

in

fineness

the

ratio

L/d.

of

a paraboloidal

-367-

~386-

negligible. varying

function

Mark shapes on

It appears from tests that (10)

Figure

29,

actual

model

kit produced to

various

greater

in

five

nosecones, are

are

his

for

numbers to

rocket

nosecones.

these

shapes

from

ratio

of

the

least

test

nosecone

first

of

what

The

2;

(b)

tested

and

body,

the

nosecone

being

its

base;

(c)

a smooth

boundary

the

Mercer's rocket

flow;

data

Stine

the

drag

slight

no

be

blunt

considered

of

only

The

as the to

between

its

surfaces an

which

distinguish

to

nosecone

the

tube

convex

side

facing

empirical

the

at

the

about

slightly.

differences

2.0;

quantitatively

L/d

drag

of

further

This

separation

of

as opposed

were

drag

31).

ratio

behavior

is

paraboloidal

extension

nosecone

in Figure

coefficient

the

in

32,

shape

of

the

nose

accounts

for

the

in drag among the five

taken

reduced

the

the

streamlined

is reduces

blunt

some

point

off,

separation

relatively

nosecones

to

Profile

0.02

edge

will

that --

If

occur

of

the

or

of the rounded

streamlined

rounded edges

streamlined-fin

respect

experienced

--

the

the

reattach

itself

the

trailing

edge

also,

rocket's to

section edge

(the

shape)

--

(or "profile")

leading

and

to

is

the

also

in

fin

a paper-thin

with

structural

flow

fin

at

squared

a

“base

drag”

separation,

ts required.

accomplished

simply

two-dimensional

a gently-sloping

in a sharp trailing edge (the so-called

compromise

in

body.

minimize

be

in

encountered

resulting

main

usually

increase

separated

will

there

leading

a 236%

commonly

or greater),

can

nose

at

configuration.

ratios

rather,

fin

streamlining

culminating Since

leading

prevent

a

than

trailing

downstream.

Streamlining

must

the

(usually

a

One

of

rather

thickness-to-chord

rocketry

the

in this

in Cp from 0.70 to 2.35 when all the fin edges

from

to

edges.

fin edges,

used in his tests

that

Providing

of blunt

rocket

Javelin

at

To

model

the effect

The

tapered

model

that

from

and/or trailing

1s considerable

and

At

the leading

edges,

off,

over

to the flow result

streamlined

squared

analogous

to

flow from

left

edges

Drag

drag due to the fins must

indicate

to

an increase

pressure the

data

Adequate

length-to-diameter

pressure

ratio

any

Mercer's

Fin Preseure

the fin surfaces are generally parallel

direction,

flow.

guide

tests.

Since

"typical"

a length-to-diameter

tangent

with

BC-74)

furthermore

considered

(a)

stock

and

29;

s

4.3.2

(Figure

particularly

BC=76

Figure

transition

curve

clearly

(Centuri

features

are

toward

streamlining.

(18).

up

be

generally

is demonstrated

significantly increased

(d)

thus

importance

streamlining from

may

nosecone The

and

drag

BO=-72, in

trend

Note

Mercer'

the

which he modifieg is

31).

lowest

might

of

interest,

The

in

increaseq,

a commercially~availapie

BC-78,

a smooth

of

Company,

shape

R is

seven

bluntness

essential

others

as

ones

(Figure the

1s a slowly.

all

purposes.

BC-70,

the

representative

at

Engineering

exhibiting

similar

tested

Javelin,

measurements

shapes

decreasing

additional the

Centuri

model

toward

ae

--

increasing

catalog

roughly

they

some

rocket

with

number,

wind-tunnel

configurations

drag

the

has plus

by the

demonstrated that

Reynolds

Mercer

in

an

of

(r/h)crit

durability

by

analogy aftersurface

"knife-edge").

requirements

trailing edge 1s very easily damaged.

here,

The

of a well-streamlined model rocket fin is illustrated

~389-

-388-

drag

its

in

rockets

in

this

due

to

often

on

this

that

of

Mercer,

as

well

so

rockets

of as

the

effects

assessed.

lug

to

blunt-finned

the

drag

to

that

much

larger

for

is possible

the

parasitic

drag.

it

relates

influence

of

a

body

We

by

launch note,

about

lug

streamline-finned

that

an

to suggest an average drag

the

fin

configurations, now

be of

increased

roughly

this

is

Cy

addition

Javelin

On

the

cannot

increment

version.

on

and

placement,

of Mercer's

0.21,

lug

diameters

rockets

model

to

basis

equal it

coefficient increment

the presence

of a launch lug on model

are

such that

the ratio

of body

of Mercer's

that

to

is identical

diameter

such that the lug placement is similar. develop

models

ratio

Javelin

a tentative in

to

which

the

formula

the

body

experiments,

To

do

a

this

launch

tube

for extending

lug

Mercer's

diameter

stands

than

the

diameter

by computing

while

diameter

1.93

of

will

be

the drag

was

in

case

a

in

coefficient

of

square

coefficient times

a large

the

greater

Denoting

area.

flow

of

separation,

area of the

the

lug may then

be written

on

ratio the

tube of

from

diameter the

A,,

rocket

entire

by

denote

outer

an

cross-sectional

on the

we have

itself,

body tube in its vicinity.

coefficient

used

area

body

area

tube

The is

--

that the lug must from

drag

therefore

cross-sectional

(Cp)rug = 5.75

but

of

is

--

Aug

(which,

cross-

circular

or 4,/ALug = 23.0.

that indicates

only

drag

for the

of

the

on its own frontal

based

(Cp)rug

one

not

of

the

drag

shall

ratio,

based that

it by

to

we

which

lug

lug

has

area included within the

the

than

and

value,

the

equal

ratio

and

4.8,

diameter

the

of

is

--

launch

Javelin

the

The

computing

lug

standard

of

tube

then

is

to

the

the

size has a diameter of about 0.40

body

recalled,

tube), of

section

23

that

centimeters.

for

area

body

the

note

the

diameter

lug

the

the

we

of the Javelin's

centimeter,

4t

available

only

can +o

reference

--

boundary

the

from

The

launch

however,

version

and

to

drag

Pressure

protrude

as

of

javelin,

a model

separation

lug.

the

which

different

of

coefficient

as

effect

the

accurately

the

to

referred

important

data

values

rather

for

reported

of

face

objects

similar

and

lugs

blunt

the

from

case,

is

layer

agrees

boundary-layer

is

again,

once

culprit,

to

to

configurations lug

giameter

area.

(7).

The

whose

due

¢ne launch lug when in place based on its own included frontal

of

67%

or

0.28,

finding

This

or more

50%

of

rockets

the

the

rear

the

near

about

by

rocket

rocket.

a lugless

# 0.25

aifferent

streamlined-fin

Cp of the

the

test

Javelin

estimates

with

well

location:

for

value

the

(presumed

his

of

version

lug

small

that

showed

research

increased

of S°p

results

variations

large

Mercer's

tube)

body

the

of

5.

that

is

drag

coefficient.

a launch

of

addition

in

role

Section

in

produce

can

a body

of

shape

the

in

Profile

We

aerodynamic

of

aspect

remarkable

changes

the

Launch Lug Drag

4.3.3 A

of

an important

discussed

as

lift

to

due

drag

determining

edges

-- does not substantially

play

it does

but

drag,

pressure

affect

lateral

or "airfoiled"

they are flat

whether

thi e

of

character

The

38.

in Figure

quite cause

a substantial

The general expression

increment due to a body-mounted

launch

-391-

-390-

==

(0¢n)\,,

(119)

and

drag

increment.

0.50

for

his

Skychute

XI

Reynolds

numbers

(Rp =

Mercer's

tests.

Since,

the

Cp

less

of

than

the

lug

0.15

the

Skychute

0.35,

the

located

-=-

rocket

2.5

x 10°)

XI

the

in

0p

of

body-mounted

lug

on a configuration

wind

Wichita

tunnel State

used

lower

Mercer,

so

is

results

directly.

it

this

following

due

to

(120)

however,

tentative

a launch

lug

the

formula

mounted

at

of

Section

the

presence

to

cannot

be

same

low-speed

level

of

covering

variations

a problem

requiring

than

that

used

by

to

compare

of

presently

available

best

we

can

to

for

the

the

drag

fin-body

is

empirical

in lug

configuration,

further

2

has

near

drag

and

research.

for

(A0D)1ug

will

of

Base only

the

base

axis

and

is

angle

the

placement

is

80

is

behind

resulting

this

and

established

lug

the

launch

in varying

a particularly

successful

the design

in

kits.

remains

area

on

the

Competition Model Rockets of

art

reiterate at

the

-- of

professional

that

time

the

of

prediction

writing

"guesstimating",

rocketry.

of model

that

It

rocket

formulae

on a firmer

is

drag

for

to

hoped will

adopt

that be

predicting

analytical

almost

more launch

foundation.

Drag section

of

with,

I must

empirical

from

be

analysis

zero

drag

by which

or left

developed

lugs

investigated,

our

(lai)

launch

however,

launch

future

in

(at

lug

lug and has incorporated

of

of

the

pressure

generally of

attack),

second

term

as

expressions size,

to

colloquialism the

launch

Mechanisms

One firm,

launch

a matter

The

joint:

device.

after

Virginia,

due

wholly

reducing

experimented

conclusion,

4.4

increment

of

commercially-available

drag

lug

to

been

pop-off

thoroughly

a

present

coefficient

of

the

problem

also

soon

of success.

In of

launching

retracted

several

their

nature

do

form

in

at had

limited

accurate,

considerable

tunnel

have

a

AV ug/4r-

have

(0Cv),., = 3.45 fuss = 3.45 jee

development

a

may

accurate

not

than

for

ratio

Kansas)

6,

of

more

Mercer

rod

means

the lug completely and launch from a tower or

Alexandria,

of

probably

much

by

of the

extremely

important

methods

due

Wichita,

necessarily the

those

is

(the

turbulence

Given

rocketeers,

the

The

not

concerning

model

air

near

as

lug

be

degrees

at

same

determined

by Malewicki

University

significantly

data

increase

lug

launch

joint

60%

a launch

the

the

a

only

The

the

to

without

fin-body

with

about

according

increment

at

tested

can

lug

about

of

Cp

overall

an

determined

Malewicki

effective

closed-breech

model's

launch

the

decrease

substantially

can

body

its

fins

most

to eliminate

that the

between

joints

the

of

{The

indicate

(20)

Malewicki

J. one

in

lug

launch

the

placing

Aug = 5.75(dse) dp H,

5.75

by Douglas

taken

Data

2

Dy = GSSb pede

rocket

drag

is

now

remaining

the

base.

perpendicular base

Since

to

the

flow

pressures

act

along

in equation

(28) may

to

be

the

considered

plane

direction the

be written

drag

simply

-392-

(122)

Coy

TFs,

Theoretical

analysis

base

the

predict

flight.

time

drag

of

a model

from

boundary

layer

separates

equations

layer

separation

A

(c)

well for

to

researched

presented last

rocket

separates

known

and

as the

as there

is

the

when

fins

phases

of

sources; blunt

the

boundary-

the the

beyond

hobby

empirical

consequently into

unable

expected

engine

is

not

converges

1s considerable

to

professional

take

a separation

be

"dead-air"

the

expression

to

then

or

been

for

base

either

level drag

of

the

account.

essentially

flow

the

the

about

firing.

The

downstream,

region.

This

motion

of the

phenomenon.

the

base

boundary

enclosing

term

of

Mgure a model

layer a volume

igs actually

air in this

region

of

cause

not

have

rocketry,

to

and

reattaching

is in

decrease

further

a

poattail

a

and

region

base

the

into

drag

base

in

a misnomer,

region

the

boundary

then

low at

when

pressure

point

circulation

R

--

the

downstream

pattern

the

showa

a conical

boundary-layer

as

the

flow

base

flat

pressure" the

in

with

tne

"base of

rocket

§ is

thickens

layer

separates

and

angle

boattail

the

is

The

thickness.

flow,

bodies;

finless

for



a model

of

base

tne

about

Flow

33:

Figure

poattail.-

the

disturbs

a decrease

in

peculiar

The

is

drag

depicts

the

cause

either

phenomena

Base 33

on

flow.

here

two

all

drag.

problems,

two

subsonic

of

exhausting

believed base

not

observed

that

jet

during

from

valid

are

resulting

generally from

accurately

point;

presence

The

(b)

can

previously,

as mentioned

and,

base

which

following

the

arise

The

last

rocket

Complications

(a)

The

theory

no

this

@iffious,

extremely

is

drag

base

the

of

at

is

there

fact,

in

D

=

rocket.

the

base

is

over

passes

forming

reached,

P)

--

and

Viscous

pressure

the

then effects

region.

eee ~394-

-39-

“pump"

it away.

the

(59),

coefficient

(123) where

Crp

Cg, =

as

the

basis

(124) The

nature

Cy of

2

wetted

area of the

coefficient

a

smaller

base

a forebody

>

bricks

the

and

base, above

by

Ce

=

of

area

determined

of

proportional

is

(54),

drag

friction

the

O¢'

Sy

the

is

of

forebody Section

base,

the

of

skin-friction 3,

we

relationship

--

that

generally

limited

employed

is,

the

form

of

base

drag.

on models

which

in

diameter

than

is

referred

to

Figure the

expect

flow

the

33)

angle not

1s

reduces

diameter

of

small

separate

boattail

base

to

casing;

the

enough

is

the

engine

to

there

a rocket

exhaust.

be

a

rear

geometry

the

the

base

(about

effect

to

tube

section

fit"

to

the

body,

area.

If

to

the

degrees)

the

surface,

drag.

The

technique

which,

for

some

reason,

must

use

in

diameter

than

the

significantly is,

just

of

course,

to enable

greater no

sense

it to

be

recovery

and

the

models

pressure

engine,

section

rocket

lateral

greater

due

base

to

are

technique,

5 or 10

boattail

the

by varying

“glove

of

trading

with

pressure

those

section

not

rocketeers

body

a reduced

from

does

A gradually-tapered



in

body

added

a main

would

to

increase

a@ main

which

downstream

the

usefulness

require

boattailing.

as

flow

will

that

stated,

widely-used

most

The

base

model

rocket

in

variations

in

drag

base

(which

a decrease

experimentation

finish,

surface

drag

rocket

or

fins

reduced

for

viscous

previously

as

some

been

drag

to

body

produces

of

effects

a model's

in

in

that

= f (Cy) this

of

boattail

exclusive

body

discussion)

roughness

guide

$

methods

the

friction

the

however,

has

there

in

roughness)

of

the

increased

Dt 9 Se

increase

account

into

=

(125),

Equation

Although

(see

‘2s

an

is

(124)

0.024 Vn,

effects

the

reductions

drag.

equations

compare

example,

of

that

7 En is

the

8S, is

Sp is the (on

such

_

implies

If we now define

(60)).

and

reduction

(for

drag

skin-friction

smaller

thickness

boundary-

in

increase

a

boundary-layer

the

that

seen

have

We

effective

in

results turn

in

which

pressure,

base

the

take

=

Do

expected,

arag-

effect

pump

jet

the

and An

reduced.

is

pump

the

therefore

thickness

layer

to

of

pressure

dynamic

separation),

we

4ncludes

boundary

The

121).

after

between

region,

dead-air

the

and

flow

outer

the

sheet

insulating

an

as

acts

however,

layer

shear

free

the

becomes

(which

layer

As

to

consequently

is

base

the

at

equation

(see

results

drag

and

air"

"dead

the

pressure

static

The

base

and

reduced,

of

a

flow,

tries

The empirical function that has been

equation

for

C

(125)

34.

in

along

is

limited

enlarging

built

with

the

a

boattail! Smee

as

with

mixes

"Jet",

acting

(9)

the external

is somewhat like a jet pump:

suggests,

as in Figure

agetermined

Hoerner

as

4 whole,

as

flow

the

of

character

The

(16).

point

at the convergence

from flow reversal

data,

and

--

stream

free

the

and

volume

dead-air

the

between

region

experimental

of

a plot

from

determined

be

can

f --

function

ee

resulting from mixing along the free shear layer -- the boundary



YT.

-

0.30

-397-

An

0.204 Cop calculated using base area 0.10

0.05

-

0

06

0.4

0.2

[e)

08

Cro

Figure

revolution and

Variation

34:

with

of

forebody

base

drag

coefficient

friction

drag

coefficient.

the

shown

experimental

data.

represent

a

"best

a

of

body

can

maximum

frontal

d,,

then

(126)

SE

=

to

the

base

is

of

a

denoted

§,,

boattailed

and

its

body

the

If

(125).

config-

associated

body

dy \*

S,,

(Z)

drag

coefficient

frontal

area

is

Cy, Dg =

drag

equation

from

friction

(127)

a large

area

diameter

pody

curve

The fit"

of

for

developed

be

uration

The

function

semiempirical

collection

of

expression

of

the

forebody

based

on

maximum

D orebod —forgbede 4 Sn

Now

= (Dszststs )( 42) - O.(¢

= a a“

Ce

(126)

Furthermore,

where

(Cp),

frontal

drag

2

db

- (

simplifying

1s

(Cpp),

apparent

drag of the as

the

that

ratio

body.

engine

on maximum

body

algebraically, 3

the

based

0.0249

db (Cy), = (+)

decreasing

the

coefficient

Lin /

Cy

Ve. (LIS 0.024

m

It

tail

base

Then

(Cp)

a3)

of

the

area.

(130) or,

is

[de a (=) ~

De “a Sy

_ ~

D 43

(Co.),=

(129)

boattail

dp/d,

The

itself.

VC

cam be reduced,

or by increasing

first The

og

technique

danger

angle €

of

is

the

by

skin-friction

limited

separation

(as defined

either

by

the

diameter

from

the

boat-

in Figure

33)

is

-398-

will

not

apply.

of

section

the

precisely,

longer

body

tube

with

boattail

that

the

rocket

it

would

have

than

Differentiation

it

cylindrical

to

be

not

should

Tasers

must

care

denote

differentiation

denote

diameter 1s

dp/dg

that

skin-friction

we

unrelated

drag

require A(Cpp)m
~

nose

2.

find

from

(170)

ARy = 46.1

= 4b dm

OGIVE

is

OSive

Sm

body

area

1.055

)

Ss

(

CYL

Sm

ogival

cross-sectional

to

area

cylindrical

()Sm

obtain

we

= 16-45

wetted

Sim.

is

= |+.0135+ .04l = +.0025 dh) dm

(LvLA/dm)® of

ratio

_

31-75

43

=

[\+ The

*

_

Q,


8

3.94

-84.

-66.2

7-79 x 1074

6.18

1.75 x 10° =

1.57 x 107

x 1079

eee.;

:

1.94 x 1073

2 x 10?

8 x 10° 9 x 109 1 x 106

and finally

(209)

x 10

Da (1)

;

3.33 x 107?

5

3 x 10? 4 x 109 5 x 10°

2

C

1.16

10%

7 x 10% 1.5

, we write

Rot v2

x

1.03 x 107

1 x 10°

>m

D=aS\oge

5

De (i)

04

1xil

coeffioy,

drag

the

a

Rocket

Re? »* “hy?

U2 = 2 =

Then

Cy

S, and U,

To eliminate

and

20.5

terms

in

ressed

} as

tone

Gres

a

Configuration

General

for the

the

assumption

28.0 27.2

10.1

21.0

15.7

19.6

drag

force

variable with

of

the

in

drag

newtons

on

the

coefficient

approximate

(0p))pp = 0.473

drag

at various

-470-

1 x 10 through 1 x 107. 1 x 109, the

the

drag

force

0.25 newton at liftoff) flight

regime

that

in

force

predicted

constant

Cp

be

dependence

of

behavior

of

values

for

large

the

drag

Rg

coefficient

is

inversely

(Cpo)pp

on

decreases.

as

»

that,

of

the

data drag

the

of

Figure

of a

assumption

for

the

Reynolds

Since

the

proportional

number

to

the

drives

skin-friction

laminar

square

camnot

increase

rapidly

enough

to

Reynolds

number

increases

into

the

climbs

rapidly,

root

offset

of

this

effect.

zone,

the

the

drag

force

experiencing

a tenfold

increase between Rg = 6 x 10° and Rp = 2x 10. with

the

“exact"

function

D.

function

for

the

drag

derived

assuming

the

drag

Reynolds

number

this

constant

wee

Phase

as

2 flight,

(Cpo)pp

Da,

in

coefficient

The

range.

is the or

= 0.473,

value Rg =5

so

Figure

to

value of

from

be

52

constant

I have

From

an

equation

Plotted along approximating (210)

over

elected

(Cpo)pp at

x10,

is

the

Table

transition

body

by

the

to

entire

choose

initiation 6 we

read

for

of this

meeps

As

52:

Variation

GCR-x drag

approximate

quadratic

the

the

variable

9) pp is (Cp

although

10°,

than

less

Rg

force

D downwards

Rp

is

in this

seen.

for this

reason

The very

can

by

encountereg

so minute

the

and

than

less

values

Dp (N)

either

commonly

is

between

(210)

by equation

th

representation

graphical

distinction

no

52,

Figure

shown

in the

levels

force

drag

The

engines.

rocket

in model

or the thrust

with

weigh

rockets

model

few

(very

weight

rocket

compared

small

is very

up to about

numbers

For Reynolds

range

number

Reynolds

the

over

(210)

equation

from

obtained

rocket.

of

Deg

coefficient drag

obtained

drag

is

force

the

newtons

“exact”

computed by

in

taking

by

the

drag

with

obtained

Datcom

(Cpo)pp

Reynolds

as

method;

0-473.

using Dg

number

the is

the

-472-

(211)

D=

approximates

Reynolds

numbers

large

values

in

drag

force

the

of

is a _

not

the

or

vehicle

than

these At

drag is

are “may

be

for

all

because

value 5 hood

know of

both

a

whether newton

three

or

the

when four

drag

performance.

the

force

thrust

orders

of

Reynolds

numbers

at

in

Rp

constant

51,

1/1000

of

and

weight

of

model the

in

the

of

10% up to

Rg

51,

greater

to the

chosen

as

the

the

approximate,

first,

because

Rp 25x

onset

of body

transition

of

the

7 and

configuration;

drag

Reynolds

is

obtainable

numbers

converted

be

given

Rocket

Drag

7-1

Limits

on

As and

The

Table

the

number

Model

than

coefficient

zone.

a value

106

in

equal

flight,

to

requiring

assumption

the

attained

that

performance

of

calculations

transformation

actual

drag

x

when

used

assumption

the

at

Rp

in

closed-

of

=

5 x

10>

a

axis

of

velocity

to

a

in

equation

at

Figure

52,

axis

like

that

applying

by

of

Pigure coordinate

the

(207).

Transonic

and

Supersonic

Speeds

greater

on which

regardless

magnitude

is,

transition

was

reasons:

to represent

of Op to within

Figure

body

calculations

rockets,

exact

saw

that

3

estimates

Reynolds

can

7.

about

exceed

to

Cp.

The

It

is

magnitude

approximation

= 5 x 109

for two major

considered

a good

as we

constant

--

acceptable

insig-

are

deviations

of

Cp with

altitude

form

magnitude

number

constant

a

yields

the

attains

Op

absolute

the

rocket

model

of

(as

Reynolds

of

numbers

although

10°

4x

these

that

small

so

Cp for the

based

=

calculation),

to

(Cpo)pp

constant

Rp

exact

because,

nearly

of

Furthermore,

a

expected

not

rockets

model

single-staged

for

rule:

deviating

flight,

Reynolds

for

function

the

Dz, represents

force

value

rocket

of

range

semiempirical

a

of

form

the

in

stated

be

can

result

This

values.

--

very

model

below

2/1000

higher

5 x 109

over

this

that

the

closely in

rockets.

seen

be

108.

calculation

are

may

large

necessary

newton

x

2.2

is

the

in

nificant

it

is

error

percentage

7,

exact

the

and

10>

x

4

between

newtons-

model

moderate-sized

to

small-

of

flight

the

during

encountered

in

quite

Dg

2

Rp

force

interest

of

from

10%

than

°

Table

of

function less

drag

inspection

From

.

x 10

approximate

the

gives

1.58

-473-

Figure

and

10°

of 2.2 x 106 » very nearly the practical limit of Ry

this

only of

in

chapter

if

the

from

the model

this

slight" 0.316,

Section

2.1.1,

treatments

can

be

compression is

Applicability

relatively

discussion

compression

that

the

the

in

accurate

The

the

due

Analysis

analyses

first

an a

reader

analytical

corresponds

of

the

on

atmosphere

slight.

the

Incompressible

results

contained

assumed of

of

six

priori

to

the

may

criterion

sections

basis airspeed

also

of

recall

“sufficiently

to a Mach number M of less

than

where

second,

from

in the

52

of

stated

semiempirical

the

this

neighbor

and

air:

oc is

the

the

speed

so-called

Strictly

with

which

“speed

speaking,

the

of

sound

waves

travel

through

the

sound".

Mach

number

associated

with

a given

-474-

-475-

varies

varies

with

you may

variation

of

sound

atmosphere.

is

by

(213) Tyzq

is

the

in

question

and

at

the

in

time

measured It

is

the

speed --

over

c

this

about

the

phenomena.

at

the

in

as

the

density.

rocket

of

the

air

The

becomes

were

of

at for

the

by

few

of

it

its

sea-level

standard

calculations airspeed

theory

can

of

vicinity

and

the

within

the

boundary

layer

leading

to

be

the

the

stagnation

edges

layer

thickens

,

of

the

increases

anda

its

the

a number

fins,

we

our

have

only

around

as

is

the

not

exhibit

not

are

numerically

the

short,

of

a

the

model

effects

rocket

are

in

bit

of

more

complex

incompressible

the

the

vast

fluid

theory

the

above

M

of

M

Mach that

such

ana

the

(.2

Drag

As a model

Sound

--

regions

from

on

value

below

as flow

to

make

theory

they

be

used

calculations.

the

airspeeds

the

various

thus

performance

at

rockets

therefore,

may

of

drag

a manner

= 0.316,

= 0.9

is

numbers

incompressible

compressibility

negligible

at

flow

as 2 model

deviation

designer in

such

up

drag

coefficient

to

approximately

meters/second.

as

literature

overall

revolution,

a a treatment

compressible

that

these

such

model

closed-form

of

fill

high-performance fact

to

of

What

interact

up

a

treat

appreciable

to

each

of

present

to

of

A

would

quite

aspect

case.

rocketeers.

flow

valid

to

portion

results

accurate

are

able

of

any

gift

modification

In

body

phenomena

analytically

model

model

of

incompressible

Although

the

study

to

designers

Nature's

of

purpose

their

the

effects

small

interest

if

the

been

a

as

of

involved

fimned

are

306

drag

not

of a

by

true.

points

noticeably

velocity

us

does

without

meters/second.

through

of

to

is

behave

geometrically

experimentally-observed

It

this

results

known

the

to

compressibility

of

on

appreciable

O.9-

assume

considered

107

of

predicted

present-

which

up

is

overall

It

grown

rocket,

practical

interest

compressibility

Presence

nose

is

has

coefficient

at

value

which

approximately

its

air in the

at

of

is

the

mathematics

by

fins

description

Furthermore,

interest

that

altitudes

reasonable

all

be

percent

which

range

must

the

The

than,which

itself.

those

that is

upon

as

flow.

altituae

altitude

however,

a

for

the

Kelvin.

therefore

influence

makes

--

or

is

maximum

boundary

(213),

temperatures

the

that

Rankine

slightly

over

at

at

tha

analytical

phenomena book

adh

lower

precise,

States

temperature

temperatures

equation

is therefore

speed

The

local

ratio

Shows

United

temperature

the

incompressible-flow

Above

tip

The

valid

which

the

¢ upon

scales,

only

constant

of

well

varies

meters/second

where

4 and

remains

from

for

temperature

absolute

It

analytically

flow

the

and

achieve.

rocketeers.

obtained

actual

can

model

of

atmospheric

and

340

altitude

4,

profile

this

here,

rockets

about

Figure

In

than

the

range

model

models

that

the

itself

Ta

Figure

sound

c

temperature.

consult

with

since

Tr

question,

of

to

and

dependence

standard

from of

launch

day

The

T is

one

found

most

to

on

wish speed

C= Cs

where

conditions,

composition

again

standard given

atmospheric

atmospheric

connection the

with

reba

airspeed

Divergence

rocket

form

approaches

near

the

nose

"Mach

tip

one"

and

--

the

speed

the

fin

leading

of

-476-

edges

in which

short

distance.

fin

trailing

transmit

through

fluid

of it

move

smoothly

and

become

tip

the

fin

and

transonic compressed volume,

nose of

fluid

thus

At

a Mach

the

decreasing

oblique from

called this

the

as

the

nose

the cone

Mach may

so-called

a

model to

the

shock.

As

conical,

intersect

boom.

the

of

ground,

In

do

in

on the

by

that

nose

its

air

original

original

that

would

M

increases

with a

the

the

cone

body

any

above

1.0

half-angle

of

shock

revolution

observers

sound

trailing

airplanes to

hear

produced

the body itself can only be heard within the Mach cone:

is

,

by

to an

again

be

=

one

Op

and drag

reason

before

1947,

the

and

the

a

as

rocket than

its

the

is

Mach

divergence.

that

it was some

Bell

to

to

and

is

increases

the

shock/expansion

quantity

Mach

The

drag

supersonic

flight

approached,

than

one

Cp

declines

subsonic

2.0.

The

between

occurs,

is

divergence

is

"the

barrier

first

Drag

and the

regime,

drag

airplane

thereafter.

the

toward

peak

of

to

transferred

velocity,

greater

call

expansion

The

be

drag

coefficient.

1.0

transonic

X-l1

and

by.

above

sonic

which

rocket

conditions.

Mach

expansion

completely

drag

existence

common years

and

the

the

at

The

rocket-powered

for

as

number

in

number

momentum

somewhat

Mach

gone

transonic

above

that

has

subsonic

rapidly

model

shock

subsonic

in

to

returned

over

under

experienced

the

of

airstream

the

not

rocket

amount

slightly

value

is

the

increases

at

phenomena

through

model

once

greater

increase

0.9

these

exhibiting

density,

Prandtl-Meyer

the

as

known

passes

in

supersonic

in

rocket

ahead

the

of

expansion

decrease

rapid

of

a model

a peak

called

in

of

coefficient

rapid

behind

transferred

toward

drag

model

certain to

therefore

reaches

M

a

model

Typically,

axis

three-dimensional

oblique

causing

is

the

a

the

state

causes

the

at

which

surrounding

from

The

importance

the

system

the

the

the

compression

horizontally-flying

addition,

is

pattern

by,

their

subsonic

one

entering

to

Now

elements

longitudinal

increases:

bounded

cases

fan.

aircraft.

pattern

flow

characteristic

the

very

a

with

occurs

coefficient

of

to

supersonically-flying

in

that

passed

return

region

normal

number

has

a

expansion.

the

becomes

surface

cone;

sonic

1.0

a normal

Mach

The of

rapid

surface

region

shock.

the

endeavor

called

the

directly

they

against rocket

fluid

fluid

up"

"pile

a model

elements

of

(as

compressed,

Once

a

pass

flight

"lead"

look

(i.e.,

sound

the

must

region

the

into

atmosphere

travelling

upstream

upstream

body

of

the

further

therefore

or

a body

velocity

the

for

the

edges

As

fluid

regime.

a thin

compression

let

crushed,

number

rocket,

the

elements

undergoing

becomes the

to

leading

flight

sonic

time

in

aside

another

the

"inform"

upstream

The

flight).

to one another.

approaching

is

body

elements

see

to

order

in

it)

of

ground

the

on

observer

an

and

overhead,

passed

already

has

it

after

heard

be

only

the

that

fact

the

air

rocket's

the

by

with

the

can

airplane

supersonic

a

reason

this

For

silence.

perfect

in

flying

be

to

appears

vehicle

the

cone

the

outside

observer

the

near

form

in which

left

void

a relatively

is the speed with which fluid

approaches

cannot

base

associated

is

behavior

over

regions

tube

partial

information

the

in front

to

body

the

fill

to

the

of sound in a fluid

speed

the

and

compressed

manner,

similar

a

In

This

passage.

air is highly

edges

again

expands

can

the

-477-

sound

exceeded

divergence

it

also

-478-

one.

Only

our

very

highest-performance

this

feat,

and

then

only

by

the

F100,

F67,

|

-+.__Half- round

> 7

ot

r

0.474

3

Oo

02

04

06

——_

| | | |

08

10

of

compressible

fluid

is

too

permit

great

to

supersonic the

drag

case

for

obtain

of

values (9)

fin-body

(ogival

or

rounded

nose

Cys)

at

Ms

16

18

20

conical) shapes.

Cp

rises

affected

1.2

and

on

use

drag

in

in

noses, For

to

1.7

and

then

2.0.

The

by

falls

the

in

to

53a,

rocket

test

containing one

comprised

its

as

far

number and

models

subsonic to

the

value

about

configuration its aS

Cp

2.00p,

peaks for

into

sharp having

drag

(denoted

1.27

Cp,

is more at M

1.2

J

2.170ps approaching

rs

[X

,

/|

~>+b.__Half-round | a=

~~

0.8

——

|

; 1

04

fe)

O

t

O02

04

06

}

08

10

joj

12

|

___Ogive ]

14

16

|

{

|

|

18

20



of

fall

having

of

Cos

/

1.6

calculations.

supersonic

results

rockets

again

round-nosed

a

rockets

sharp-nosed

declines

for

transonic the

order

performance

data

c.

principles,

data

times

only

first

experimental

Compressibility: back

transonic

to

at

we

from

of

recourse

tested

and

calculation

have

coefficient

one

revolution

must

model

Figure

of

T

2.07

analysis

the

with body

directly

flight,

based

for

finned

practical

categories:

as M approaches at

the

shown

M = 1.05

severely

a

about

combinations

As

distinct

coefficient

Cp

presents

velocities.

, two

flow

subsonic

formulae

small

associated

coefficients

semiempirical

Hoerner

complexity

mathematical

The

was

14

)

247—

Coefficients

Drag

Supersonic

and

Transonic

of

Determination

Semiempirical

7.3

As

12



staging.

and

+--—4

ee

0.877

and

|

enne

4.944

multiple

to

had

be

often

must

Co

Cos

highest-thrust

Bl4,

types

--

resort

then

even

and

--

on

So

powered

available

engines

rocket

model

when

accomplish

can

designs

T

16,—

Mach

exceed

to

rockets,

model

as

such

impulse,

total

limited

]

204-—}+-—

of

vehicles

small

for

difficult

extremely

is

it

that

means

24

Figure

53:

finned

bodies

behavior both

Variation

of

ogive

described

of the

and in

experimental

of

©

drag

coefficient

revolution. drag

coefficient

half-round

equations behavior

(a):

noses.

(214) to

and

within

with

Mach

Experimentally of

the

(bd): (215) 10%.

rocket

for

determined

pictured,

Analytical

that

number

using

functions

approximate

the

-480-

2.0.

The

classes

the

difference is

due

shock a

rounded

in

supersonic

cone

to on

be

the

other

front

surface

the

difference

and

also

the

of

of

nose

greater

momentum

urations

have

higher

the

off"

itself.

two

body

revolution.

transfer

the

coefficients

at

in

is

mathematically

drag

coefficients

53a

to

very

not

really Figure

Mach

1.5

high

worth 53a

are

the

are

of model

If

takes

the

with

the

transonic

rocket

of exceeding

construct

precision.

igs

config-

and

since

(in

(which in itself Mach

one),

curves

data

the

has

assuming

super-

model

rockets it

for Figure is

presented

curves

above

applicability not

been

to

established:

a high-performance

is justified

however,

of

procedure

the

their

configurations

of initially

a

fact,

and

formulae

the

Such

though,

only the highest-performance

capable

there

rounded-nose

represent

approximate

liberty

configuration

to

on extrapolation)

range

rocket

of

will

trouble,

only

based

possible

which

order

a wide

one

and

neighborhood

As

are

should

by the fact in fact prove

54:

Shock

blunt-nosed

.

the

a

Figure

of

patterns, the

velocities. It

ahead

illustrates

associated

shock,

a

forward

shock

observed

like

a rounded

slightly

pattern

of

to

54

noge

shock

nose

its

Figure the

sharp

the

due

at

generateg

a

the

shock

"stands

attached

drag

of

rounded

between

a blunt-based

with

that

the

shock/expansion

base

itself

it

structure

than

in

is

The

by

i.e.,

point

between

shock

produced

the

configuration

nature

the

shock;

point.

is detached:

detached

sonic

from

in

and

shock

is an attached

hand,

in

nose

oblique

a pencil

the two

difference

a sharp

directly

on

the

appreciably

The

shed

and

the

with

flight

extremity

of

fundamental

nose.

suspended

nose,

a

associated

by

appears

to

in behavior between

possible

fans;

bodies

compression

wavy

produces

than

the

of

expansion

dotted

delineate

an attached

detached

patterns

about

sharp-nosed

Solid

lines

indicate

revolution.

waves;

lines

nose

and

shock

lines

the

shock (b)

indicate

wakes

of

the

(a) which

formed

in

front

expansion

bodies.

results of

the

and

shocks waves

The

or

conical

in a lower drag rounded

nose.

-482-

yet

will

represent

be

found

of

this

--

begins

second

a

that type

sharp-nosed

vehicles

=1.0+35.5

(214b)

Cos,

Sb

= 1.27+0.53e

a

similar

set

for

(215d)

=

These

approximating with

of

8

Table

predict

over

Cp

the

values

Mach

basis

not

the

reveals

I cannot should

~5.75

functions experimental

that within

number

even

of

0.9

or

in in

relatively

ag

Table

53b

8.

simple by

and

Inspection

functions experiment

2.0.

enough, and

written

Figure

determined

through

(214)

physics,

curves

those

strongly

equations

in mathematical

data

2.0)

€M 2.0) (1.2

(M-1.

however,

(215) having

as

that

having

a precision

Cp |

— [Dsl

e

you any

Percent error

a

1.000 1.089

1.05 1.10 1-20 1.40 1.60 1.80 2.00

1.70 1.67 1.57 1.40 1.30 1.27 1.27

1.800 1.680 1.513 1.356 1.300 1.281 1.274

1.43

valid

anywhere

0.00 -6.92

1.355

Half-Round

(0.4

——Fehskens -Malewick| so n - Benge ce cee Capora

15

5

=

Percent

o 2 Cc o Vv c

o a

04. 6(b):

vertical

£

Burnout

flight;

altitude

models

15

using —

error Type

Fehskens

03

of

B4

approximate

methods

for

|

c

x £&

5 75) PE CIE

fe) £>

tooo eee onc c STE S SEES Tete

& -10/

PeO02

Figure vertical

04

6(c):

~=—-09

7(2):

7

73

(kg)

Burnout velocity error of approximate sethods for

flight;

models

using Type D4 engine. —Fehskens- Malewicki ae Caporaso- Bengen

107 54

ce

fA

ru)

07.

15)

-Malewicki

Kmax

| Aa

Figure vertical

engine.

10

all

05

Mo

----- Caporaso -Bengen

_—_ 5

(kg)

oo

O06 Mo (kg)

Maximum

flight;

ee

models

altitude using

IS

0 a a

€ o

-54

Vv

a a

08

O

&o -10} -15

10

03

-

+

r

05

r

Mo

error Type

B4

of

approximate

engine.

methods

for

Figure vertical

7(b):

Burnout

flight;

-

11

09

O07

models

ct

Figure

Mo

10

08

.~—«06

33

(kg)

altitude using

error of approximate Type

aethous

for

D4 engine.

neg enrwant

02

>

—-

c Cc

:

Bengen

error

fe)

aes Caporaso

in

£

——Fenskens -tMatemirke:

Vy

>= 10

15

15)

10,

10

©

9

co

ee

°

oi Ditoseeeesecbicrc777

zs! ose. ee @ Op

i

le)

o



o

ne

E

PE

\

Kmax

eeneeereeeretes

Noe

ee

o+———

£

in ke77

~hnes

5

c

ee

\

! D405 -10a

~

-5 S

«

“\———, .

U c

——Fenskens-Moatewick:

& -10

Figure

7(c):

vertical

Mo

Maximum

flight;

using

error

Type

of

D4

approximate

methods

fop

engine.

Figure

8(b):

vertical

is

error

(kg)

Burnout altitude error of approzizate methods for

flight;

incurred

divergence,

for in

values

the

Kain

9.17

velow

of m,

an

engine.

F100

Type

using

models

kg

due

additional

to

transonioc

cases.

101]

Ymax .20

Figure

6(a):

flight;

error

incurred

is

——Fehskens - Malewicki seers Caporaso-Bengen T 30 40 50 Mo. (kg)

Burnout

vertical

drag

:

divergence,

velocity

models for

in

the

using

values

Knin

error Type

of

M,

Cases.

of

FlOO below

Percent

-15+ 10

error

in

[e)

Percent ' ' fe) oO

error

ol

in

vy,

drag

50

40

30 Mo

altitude

models

.20

10

(kg)

an CaporasoBergen .

+

145+/-—.—

13

M1

09

O07

05

r

act

>

. Nk Kmin

approximate

methods

engine.

additional

0.17

An kg

due

to

for

transonic

-15

y .20

10

Figure

8(c):

vertical

error

drag

te

——Fenskens

~104

is

sere Caporaso-

.

+ 30

Maximum

flight;

incurred

divergence,

for

in

using

values

the

Bengen

50

40

altitude

models

-Malewicki

Kyyn

error Type

of DB

Cases

of

FLOO

below

approximate

an

engine.

0.17

Kg

due

methods

for

additional

to

transonic

|. terete eee

3

—.

: ewicki ____ Fenskens-Mal e seree Caporaso - Beng

15

f

-104

-15

———>

10

Figure

15

9(a):

vertical

:

nn

20

Mo

(kg)

Burnout

flight;

velocity

models

error Type

F/

approximate

methods

for

engine.

TDR

' ' ' '

i

R.

Of

ees

-154 10

30

of

Kein

Figure vertical

ad 9(c):

/ Mo

Maximum

flight;

20

(kg)

altitude

models

using

ae



error of approximate Type

P7

methods

for

engine.

—Fehskens -Malewicki ----- Caporaso-Bengen

o

[e)

°

i

9(b):

.20

Burnout

flight;

models

1 30

25

altitude

using

error

Type

F7

of

approximate

methods

for

engine.

Saat

vertical

.

oe

Figure

: 15

ee

z 10

a

-15

or one

'

Percent

error

a

in

yp

154

using

25

ny

25)

ee

wee

Oe

\

eee

ee

AN H

Kmin a

le)

error

fo} .

-5

Percent

Percent

error

10)]

iN

eee

Vp in

—— Fehskens-Malewicki seeee Caporaso-Bengen

oa

Fenskens- Malewicki Caporaso-Bengen

Ymax

___

65

-564-

model

stated

motion

for

rocket's

(16)

the

in

Section

in

flight

Under

the

assumption

experience reduce

of

a

model

respectively,

ana

the

model

rotations,

does

during

not

its

oscillate,

flight

of

or

(16)

and

(17)

Numerical

Methods

Nonvertical

In

Section

1 closed-form, were

2 of

In the

case

the

Digital

Computation

of

Trajectories

this

approximate

sufficiently

for

chapter

we

solutions accurate,

of equations

were

to

the

simple,

(90)

and

able

to

determine

equations and

(91)

general

we

shall

of

motion

for

not

practical

be

coarser

The

generalization to

2-4

horizontal

of

several

approximate,

iteration,

in

the

machinery.

One

necessarily

accuracy

computation

the

nonvertical

flight

is

a relatively

the

rocket

of

following

Aye.

Ate

of

this

Once

has

its

into

done,

been

form:

at lect) > — mag]

~

= at lew

= fin

concomitant

m (t)

nigh

$]

.

(are?

(94)

Vt

(95)

Drag =

(96)

bya

= aefrcerd - meer

(97)

die

=

kv

.

kur]

$] at true) ~kve

schemes

simple vertical @

theoretical-velocity-increment

the

a con=

intervals.

time

of

motion

can

either

accept

either

the

intended

course,

of

hand,

in

degradation

the

or

2.4,

by

calculations

be besed

Section

of

those

computing

so must

interval

therefore

will

by

work

to

easy

of

components.

or

(93)

work

of

use

separating

(92)

do

the

Section

part

computer

over

section to

automatic

to

wish

of

this

of

iterative

such

amount

advantage

analogous

with

use

who

those

with

solutions

out

siderable

cosa —mitdg -[keefulvy

The

for

carry

also

perceptible

techniques

numerical

put

Fit)© - kvx

Vx

m(t) Tt 2-2

.

components

equations o¢

m(t)dv;FY = F(t) y - metg - kvy

(91)

se.

differential

to

(90)

u

horizontal

are,

that

rigid-body

general

the

sufficleatly

still

and

purposes

a

offer

primarily

% cose ~[k+ef(«)] vx

F(t)

m(t) ays

the

and

mt) $= Fit)

(17)

that

1,

Motion

of

on

closed-form,

any

reveal

to

failed

hobby

techniques.

Equations

investigation

solution to (90) and (91) which is sufficiently accurate

for to

nand

Extensive

has

researchers

on

vertical

motion

f Vehicles Launched for

Solutions

Vertical

Differential

The

As

Rocket: :

the

from

Angle

3.1

fortunate.

(even)

Non-Oscillating

at Any

go

analytical

rockets.

The

3.

shall

we

ag

accurate

designing

of

purpose

the

for

need

ever

that are ag

results

in Section 2-1 produce

developed

solutions

analytical

closed-form,

the

that

conclude

may

we

scatter,

of

matter and

single method

“loop”, appears

-566-

v= Vik)*+ Cy?

yryrday

(113)

y=yray

(101)

xX =X+4X

(114)

XxX

(102)

y= yraye

(115)

t

(103)

x =X +dX3

(104)

v = Moe

ground

(105)

t

different

At,

=

Ay,

= actual

actual

variables

Likewise,

the

of

Section

2.4

according

to

the

of

(106)

p=

(107)

vertical as

in

velocity

velocity Section

drag-from-prior-velocity

technique

set

are

horizontal

velocity

--

generalizes

equations

to

presented

OtlFie) > ~mitrg -kvy]

y= _ me) ny = ACL y -kvil m(t>

(108 )

ay = atly+ 5]

(109)

ax = at[x+5%

(110)

y=ytty

velocity

increment

equal

for

set

to

use

first of

the

meter

to or

equations

initial

angle

method

the

zero

velocity

presence

so of motion

by

that

a fixed

of

assumes

launch

with

the

(116)

OV;

=

(117)

Drag

(118)

0V3

(119)

Ay

=

(120)

ax

= atlv+ 42 ]sin

(121)

vy =V+AV9

(222)

y = y+ ay

(123)

x

(le4)

t=t+at

atl

of

simulate

from

®,-

theoretical

of

using

Such

velocity

2.4.

method

--

nonvertical

below:

the

second

flight

=

=

the

launch

a slightly trajectory

a

scheme

angle

suitable

increments

F(t) — m(t)gcos 8,lo] a g

increment

increment

the

on

is

ee

= drag-free vertical

horizontal

the

necessary

calculations

on

Oy,

increment

"theoretical"

for

is

begin

oe

= drag-free

it

to

ewe

Ox,

order

k(v+ ave)

atl F(t) — mit)+ gees Oo= - k(vedve) 2

at [vs Ml] cos 8

=X+AX

eee

other

= t+at

=t+At

ee

the

rod

X+AX%

a

and

In

=

a

where

x

Se

ee

(100)

(112)

:

XK + ax

——

ax = at[x+

H=

ee em --e.-

(99)

(111)

OT 8 ee re wee a en =

ay = atly+ S22]

—-

(98)

-568-

while

the

launch

phase

using

the

method

of drag

a nonvertical

from

prior

Aves

(126)

oy = atlv+ SY ]cosQe

(127)

AX

=

(128)

v=

v+Av

(129)

y=

t=t+at

schemes to

the

for

second.

The

above do

not,

2:3 The

with

the

nonvertical

herein

can

phase

be

of

requires

thrust

.001 and

and

F7-

are

30°

at

smaller

0.1

or

is

same

as

at

to

Model

paths.

the

interval may

be

used

used use

with in

discussion

Rocket

Due

every

to

vast

to account

parameter

were

considered;

the

restricted

interest

i.e.,

quantity

for a full

relevant to

to

of

the

range

cases

B14,

data

BA,

that

would

of variation

nonvertical

certain

or illustrative

decision

to

under

the

launch

of

same

in

of

flight,

deemed

in

the

to

be

valae in practical

model

within

Three

cases

2s

the

most

the

rules

were

of

then

rocket,

and

one

with either

Section here.

Section

engine

the of 2.4;

equal

m °

to

corresponding

a body

with

second, third,

»

mended

tube

of

model

a value

Code

launch

the

angle

deviation

of

the

of

initial

condition

the

Mational laws

angle

@,

governing

of

for

each

engine:

one

first

case,

engine

alone

and

of

about

liftoff

weight

Case

of

the grams

FLOO

the

parameter

k

in

sea-level

air

used.

and a value

manufacturer's

engine,

(0.453

Kg),

woere

tne

this

being

the

Por

for

40

the

recon-

maximum

of k approximately

case were used.

mass

initial

drag

0.3

to the engine were

considered

rocket

an a

repre-

a typical

one representing

the

to

30°

of nonverticality

worst-perfoming

coefficient

equal

from

hobby.

rocket,

the

glove-fit

of my

of the first

453

a drag

burning-phase

both quantities were slightly more tnan doubled;

that as

of

all

initial

by most

The

computed

For

engine.

mass

the

to

as

the

representing

that

for

well

severe

the

possible

an

Safety

rocketry.

best-performing

the

of

by the

the

with

to perform

this being the greatest

Rocketry,

of

made

assumption

senting

representative

five

and

the

permitted

represents

possible

first

vertical,

practice

thus

was

Again,

Trajectories

discussed

‘the

than

for

Computing

vehicles

thrust

be

described

a number

the

burnout.

second

further

methods

calculate

flight

those

any

or

recommended

functions

both

multistaged

altering

time

0.01

numerical

rocket

by

to

staging

require

to

the

solutions,

extended

second

the

of the

employed

2.5 were

generated

particular

flight

a

mass

therefore,

model

each

Section

calculations

vertical

Examples of Nonvertical been

be

Association

while

second

to

in and

vertical

accuracy;

methods

have

of

appropriately

good

FLOO,

The

case

method

method,

has

p4,

used

rocketry-

coasting

latter

types

calculations

presented

functions

first

they

as

=X +AX

the

former

the

rePresenteg

"

(131)

the

be

y+hy

x

mass

velocity

may

at [v+ 4¥] sin®,

(130)

and

flight

m(t)gcos@o-kv2] th

at[ F(t)-

(125)

As was

3-2

of

-56

times

An exception was made in the maximum the

value

maximum

of

Mm, m,

legal

was

taken

liftoff

-570-

through

14.

on

severe

burn

flight

considerable

burning-phase

burning

of

a@ very or

risky

the

in fact,

ground

rockets;

results

in

You

should

note,

that

trajectories

sd

have

sobw

the

predicted,

recovery been

given

time

the

ground

applies

to

The

burning safety

as

some

engines

The the is

and

no

severe

of

in

into

called

10

with

ejection

from to

vertical

models

trajectory

to

a term which describes

Xp

is

23 m,

burnout

30°

launch

my = +140

14,

time

the

is

0.35

predicted

or

kg,

activation,

Kk = .002 ke/m; second.

impact in

on

The

the

seconds,

altitude

x» =3m,

Yp

18 40 m.

yys5m.

time

of

flight

ground

if

there

are

marked

sodels

m) = .020 kg, k = .00005 kg/m;

my = +050 kg, k = 00012 kg/m; x, = 9m, yy 215m.

“Dower

angle;

on

apex,

were the

Curve

Curve (c)s The engine

and

no

(b):

the

recovery

time

burning of

system

curves.

require

rule or

strike

which not.

long-

of

its

angle

by models

known

range

Ourve (a):

for

for any

not

using

because

purnout

trajectories

predict

does a

Non-vertical

launch

activation

--

10:

using Type Bl4 engine.

the

a

through

impact

rocket

flight

to @ phenomenon

"gravity turn",

a dive

considerations

discussion

of

Figure

reader

whether

change

of

the

the

Figure

case

seconds

system

9-secong

mediun-

in

activates

flight

phase

until

safety

system

--

fe)

launch of

parachute

enable

that

and

cases

weight

Figures

Times

further

in

100

to develop

thrust

colloquially

were

such

seen

200

n>

engines,

a nonvertical

continued

flights,

burning due

and

say,

in nonvertical

low

behavior

recovery

to

time

rocket

bears

makes

drag

to

recovery

model

during

rocketry as the

at

The

E

performance

are

particularly

there

Needless

the

paths

examining

been

rocket

implications.

long- burning

when

if

a delay

behavior

experienced

engine

high

Figureg

short-burning-time

flight

commonly

have

the

the

before

engines

altitude

curves

of

all

and

on

delay.

selection

behavior

activation.

of

the

of a nonvertd oa)

system

marked

position

influence

catastrophic

prang".

other

the

the

more

is

expect,

indeed,

power,

ground

in

the

F7

under

all

displayed

curvature.

type

proposition

heavy-weight

14,

are

involving

increases,

3001

States.

calculations

for cases

time

time

United

As one would

subsequent

is least As the

of the

the

using

professional

the following

eee,

results

in

wo

The launch

rockets

pe cee

model

te

10

for

a cr

mass

400

400

5.60

3004

@

g00}1

ee

6004

2001

(m)

6.20

~_ £

©

4007

Xp = 55 Ws Vp

51m.

Curve

Xp

19

The

215m,

Yp

=

m,

(b):

Curve

m.

(c):

mg

engine

=

burning

kg,

time

= +00012 kg/n;

k

kg,

-050

k = is

.002

l. 20

kg/m;

sec.

13:

using

Non-vertical

Type

FLOO

trajectories

engine.

Curve

Xp = Ol mM, Yp = 103m.

(a):

Yp = 47m.

Curve (c):

Xp

Yp

The

13m,

=

Ql

m.

engine

for

30°

launch

angle;

models

kg/m;

my = .230 kg, k = -0003 kg/m; my = .453 kg, k = 0045 kg/m; burning

time

is

0.50

sec.

8.20

1200}

600)

15.20 ©

~

E

©

>

>

200 3.50

©_707 fe)

Figure

using

(e)

200

12:

Type

24.4

16.86 r

x

400 (m)

Non-vertical

D4 engine.

trajectories

Ourve

Oo

800

(a):

My

for

=

30°

-032

kg,

Figure

14:

-00007 kg/m;

using

Type

angle;

launch

k =

fe)

models

800

=

236

m,

yp

=

342

m.

Curve

(b):

My

=

-065

kg,

k

= .00017 kg/m

Xp

Xp

= 133

m,

yp

= 160

m.

Ourve

(c):

My

=

+125

ke,

k

= .0027 ke/m;

Xp

=

burning

time

is

2.90

Xp = 696 m, yp = 3ll m.

57M,

Yp

= 38m.

The

engine

sec.

the

1050

model

liftoff.

m,

yp

imoacts he

(m)

4403 > 2000 1600

= 1079

. 1200

trajectories for 30° launch angle; Curve

engine.

Xp

=

x

Non-vertical F7

© 20.01

© 6.84 400

Z0

8 ——_,

600

10.40

4004

ee

8004

7.60

Curve

B-

(bd):

Curve (ce):

barniag

time

-110

mpg =

(a):

on the ground

engine

pe

E

4

00

NE

4

Oe

@ _

er

1200

m, = .110 xg, x = .00012

Curve (bd):

xp = 28M, =

1000

ee

pigure

800

ee em

modelg

= -00005 kg/m;

k

kg,

-100

angle;

launch

30°

-021

=

Wo

(a):

Ourve

m.

for

trajectories

600 (m)

a

= 131

x

ae

yp

400

einem

= 82m,

200

RON eR REME

engine.

fe)

ere

B4

600

500

(m)

Mo

=

ke,

k =

.00012

-230

kg,

k =

models kg/m;

-0003

kg/m;

Mg = +300 kg, k = .0045 «g/m;

under power 6.84 is 9.00

sec.

seconds

after

wena.

Type

using Xp

x

400

300

Non-vertical

11:

Figure

———__—-_—_

r

200

100

fe)

16.70

14.30

-

RES

[e)

2.80 © 5:70

Ti SE

1004

a

y

>

oe

-574-

events:

therefore

to

curve

further

path

flight

F(t)cos@,

by

given

is

is decreased.

direction curve

is

illustrated

long-burning

to

change

to

be

less

maneuver

intentional

an

booster

a

injected parallel

into a

to

rocketry,

model effect

and

Pe

or multistaged

affected by gravity under

and

to

thrust

even

be

the

some

gravity safety

an

hazard

in

cases

designs,

that their topmost

nearly

burnout

of

horizontally the

last-stage

-

its

flight

at

over

to

position

helping

component

of

gravity

satellite

vector,

and

or

gravity

--

more

an

in

thus

which

of

gravity

away

from

angle

@

(b),

causing

perpeidicular

to

tae

Tne

gravity.

to

less

of

turn

its

to

its

tae to

rocket

its

tends also,

vertical,

in waich there

the

In (a)

the vertical.

perpendicular even

turn.

aad waich taerefore

against

effective

tips

a gravity

vector,

further

flying is

F

couponent

velocity

path

already

@

turn

not

rocket

to

bend

since all

of

it its

therefore

is an even greater instantaneous

tarust

is

velocity

effective

against

continue.

In

of

long-burning

three-staged

many are

a

to

undergoing

undesirable

is

two-staged

of

surface.

turn

A great

turning

is

that

Earth's

vehicles.

travelling

before

the

to

tangent

line

direction

a

in

enable

to

as

so

purpose

Rocket

subjected

tnrust

gravity

the

the

for

course

orbit

its

a potential

rockets,

observed

vehicle's

however,

“ee

engines

even

performed

impact.

15:

instantaneous

4s

low-thrust,

a

power-on

a

in

engineering,

aerospace

professional

is

eventuate

may

engine,

which

a process

for

which,

and

--

15

Mgure

in

vertical,

the

from

Figure is

trajectory

the

cause

effects

thrust

of

vertical

the

in

thrust

these

Both away

even further

to

In

effective

the

component

vertical

the

since

Also,

increase.

to

gsin@

When

the quantity

causing

greater than 0,,

this happens @ becomes

vertical.

the

from

away

subsequent

the

cause

to

tends

ee ee Ta

which

SS

and

ee

flight,

of

direction

instantaneous

the

to

perpendicular)

(1-e.,

normal

gsin@,

9,

of gravity

1s a component

there

vertical

local

the

with

angle

some

makes

initially

trajectory

whose

In a rocket

“=

of

ee

sequence

so

adversely

stages or

model

even

engine

are often downward occurs

=--

same is true of

many single-staged models using the low-thrust, long-burning

enn eos

The

we

on the number of stages 4 model may have.

ef:

a fact mentioned earlier in connection with safety limitations

-577-

-576-

latter

characteristic

weathercocking

of

than

low

at

flight

horizontal

prohibiting

regulations

beginning

under

altitudes

launching

the

of

the

for

angles

at

rockets

model

more

high-speed

and

responsible

are

of

Sporting

N.A.R.

the

dangers

the

models

caused

have

sometimes.

a

of that

recall

will

gravity-turning

of

dangers

the

Similarly,

Code.

the

prohibited

be

to

stages

three

for

greater than 30° away from the vertical.

free

conditions

those

portions

above

the

assumed

projectile, shape

will of

be

notice

the

burnout

to

familiar

calculation

the

for

equetions

are

who

readers

Those

curves

points

zero.

The

and

a fundamental of

Figures

those

that

trajectory

of

difference

between

through

lying

10

would

parabola

-- which

igs to

14

result

a drag-free,

neglecting the Earth's curvature,

of an inverted

drag-

under

motion

projectile

of

physics

elementary

the

with

will say

if

k

were

constant-mass

be in the

that,

if there

were no drag, the portions of the trajectories above the burnout points would be symmetrical about a verti cal line drawn through

the flight apex.

is

lost;

apex,

the

giving

In cases of nonzero drag, however,

trajectory

falls

the

path

flight

orf

the

more

steeply

@ppearance

of

the

flight.

x-direction,

or

"humped

over",

in

the

later

stages

of

A trajectory computed for finite drag will algo lie

entirely below (or inside") the zero-drag flight path.

thereby

--

launcher

gravity-turning

and

"weathercock",

to

the

reader

The

turn.

gravity

disastrous

The

a light

even

leaves

required

@,

nonzero

the

creating

it

as

soon

as

upwind,

turn

or

engines

impossible

flight

cause the slowly-ascending model

breeze will

intended

margins.

since

is attempted,

launch

a vertical

even when

their

stability

vertical

makes

often

for

jn

Te

with

static

positive

excessive

and/or

hea vy

too

somewhat

vehicles

such

build

to

tendeg

have

modelers

past,

the

In

F7.

the

as

such

F engines

EB or

this symmetry

after

the

being

compressed

flight

a

at

-578-

general

in-flight

variety

of

the

and

moment;

it

precisely given

slight are

the

wind

Impulsive

and

propulsive

to

uncertainties

vehicle

forcing

due

precise

nature

in flight,

a detailed

method

the maximum

altitude

attained

general

forcing

functions

for

as

with

any

for

would

the

will]

to

such

a

of

of

modeler

to

4.1

solid-particle

The

to

of

motion

inereases

in

drag

we

shall

and

however,

to

ejection, Because

of

the

vertical

important

a far

more

of

this

forcing set

with

Perturbation

of

which

of vertical

motion;

Chanter

2 4s valid

Blven

dynamic

analysis

equation

(16)

due

section

to

the

1s not the

formation

Jt is exact

it is an approximation. only

provided

that

does not move laterally tea much duvine any

C.G.

disturbance.

an oscillating

of

led

to

wee

First,

(16) is in order.

of motion

eauation

this

in

equations.

these

of

assumptions

the

of

Later

vehicle.

due

thrust

effective

of

reduction

solution

terms

perturbation

included

the

differential

general

the

down

In

actuality,

the

momentary

ee

for

Se

for

encountered

Motion

eauation

the model's

is

of

differential

of completel¥

Equations

that

precise

Tt

basis

combination

remember

The

useless.

some

to

encountered

to

the

and

the

review

a

which

yawing

and

attempt

of the disturbances subjected

disturbances

from

wrote

we

1.2

equations

any

calculation

the

out

which is to say that any possible

Differential

Section

In

in

due

form

carried

Terms

pitching

forcing

which

be

disturbances.

standard

to

of

will

be

me

synthesized

know

departure

precision.

can

of this

a

different

encounter

the

function

of

solutions

rotative

flight,

be

solutions

functions

rocket

of

moment

forcing

rigid-body

section will

the

jn model

infinite

oscillations

from

possible

completely

have

standard

the

SRA ee

calculation

of

of

disturbances.

See

to

launch

by a rocket be

--

virtually

cause

change

his

in the nature

the

altitudes

possible

predict

of

may

moreover

malfunctions

impossible

of these

the

conditions

different

not

profile

detailed

because

which

which

therefore

effects,

also

at

directions,

flight.

staging

functions

winds

the

under

disturbances

The

is

for

performance

forcing

vehicle.

speeds

equations

impossible

set

all

in

capability.

well-nigh

a

Derivations

affected by in-flicnt

ei

altitude

and

to

that

desioy

Se,

present

--

of

vurvose

the

Eh

rocket's

senseless

altitude

nosition

discussed

motion

directed.

assumption

a

this

facilitating

aes

to

be

of

in

to

least

contribute

Ee

attempt

calculation

now

1s

are

that

and

co

would

are

It

which

structural

vehicle

thereby

forcing

ek

the

we

rigid-body

the

of

effects

attack,

the

in

the

in

t,)

for

aiscussion

nearly the

of

to

the

except for relatively short times -- on the order of a few tenths

on

about

throughout

important

representation

The

Then

or moments,

the step forcing is due

to slight aerodynamic asymmetries, the strength of the perturbing moments Will vary a8 the square of the airspeed. Where the step

produces

torques,

rockets where

_

tn cases

lowering

My the

j |

arises from ® uniform horizontal wind the magnitudes of M, and

forcing

step

to

a model

into

t,

time

some

at

of

response

the

compute

the

that

assume

axig

yaw

the

and

Response

arises

suddenly

that

Step to

order

In

Veloot ty

conditions.

initial

setting

pitch

the

both

account

into

taken

I have

that

angular

of completeness

sake

for the

it is merely

one axis only;

about

and

consider

to

reason

horizontal despite

wi the

it

is

nd

effects

admitted

. fa > nee

assume

you

dis placement

angular

initial

nonzero

if

interpreted

easily

more

be

will

behavior

response

the

and

~589-

-590-

response

be

be

zero;

to

considered

not

or

whether

true

is

this

disturbing

the

of

one

if

lost

will

igs

rocket

the

quiescent

prior

the

of

in

--

results

equations any

will

overall

and fy(t) are both effectively infinite at the

the

Again,

of

Ay

(160b)

Wx

and

Hy

pitch

t,

after state

impulse,

as

a homogeneous

liftoff specified

discussed

response

specialized

we

set

in

for

of

by

to

impulsive

again

assume

equations

initial

be

the (154).

the

hypothesized model

wees

Hy

already

been

taken

into

and

Hy

--

including

zero

for

as long as these values do not to

exceed

will

then

to

greater

than

to

performance

conditions:

0.2

radian

during

either

cause

the

the

subsequent

a wide

and

Hy

axes,

and

I, the

components

of

the

impulse

about

the

yaw

respectively,

of the

unique

nature

idealization

disturbing moment

of impulsive

involving

applied

the

forcing assumption

for an infinitesimal

rockets,

high-

designing

specialized

two

rocket about Sinusoidal forcing of a non-rolling one

are

in

by analyzing

obtained

be

can

could

relating

information

the

all

interest

of

is

disturbances

and non-rolling

rolling

that

find

that

forcing

sinusoidal

of both

cases will

of

Poreing

casesé

=

=

variety

for

models

to Sinusoidal

ee

Response

rocketeer

sinusoidal

2,

Chapter

time

Although

forcing

(a)

a mathematical

infinite

have

(the

impulse

of an

time period)»

only,

axis

its

varies

in which as

frequency

the

square

varies

of

amplitude

the

of

en ee

response

=

wy

Because is

for

attack

forcing

where

this

;

acceptable

4.3.4

a model's

rotational

following

(160a)

(160c)

of

(160).

values

be

angle

Response

instant

the

produce the

fx(t) but

by setting the yaw and pitch

tine:

rem nen

at

effect

Impulse

to determine

occurring

with

to»

for ai}

=0

Fy (t)

=

be computed

zero

ee ee

In order

to

time

must

response. 4.3.3

be

f(t)

one

is

torques

spinning.

The

(161)

to

ee ewer

the

response

functions

regarding

information

no

that

concluded

be

may

it

4.3.1

Section

impulse

account

of

that

to

similar

reasoning

By

guaranteed.

be

to

is

analyses

dynami ¢

2's

an

forcing

actually,

bounds,

Chapter

of

validity

the

if

unavoidable

is

work

the

but

smal)

attack

of

angle

upper

such

establish

to

experimentation

numerical

some

be

the

the airspeed

directly

the

with

airspeed;

and

(b)

ling rocket in which Sinusoidal forcing of @ rol

the roll

exist

sinusoidal rate

about

nature

itself,

the

so

pitch

of that

and

the

1s

forcing

axes

to

the

noments

sinusoidal

yaw

due

of

angular om

0.2

of

they

It admittedly take,

response.

the

during

time

any

at

radian

that

an

exceed

not

will

rocket

the

sure

make

to

enough

only

subject

arbitrarily,

My

restri ection

the

to

My ang

choose

you may

calculations

response

step

In making

-591-

~—an

~~

-592-

fy (t) = Ag Sin wet

(62a) (162b)

fy (t) =

We

frequency

rocket's

the

to

yaw

(1632)

Ag = Aov2

(163)

We

per

of

as

the

perturbation

constants

values

of

of

Ap

proportionality

and

Oe at

an

which

airspeed

may

of

be

one

meter

the

second

type

exhibits

forcing

functions

(164)

fy (t) = Ag cos wat in model

means,

to velocity

tionality

of

since

the

1s proportional

the

inertial

to

strength of the

square

perturbation

the

of

aero-

the

air-

1s proportional

to

directly with

which in turn varies

rate,

roll

of the

square Both

types

most

=

Wx

started

arise as

the

immediately

behavior

actual

of cases

a

such

of interest.

at t = O with

rotationally

conditions:

Xx = Ky =O

(166b)

be

to

flight,

the

vast majority

therefore

should

assumed

represents

accurately

in the

forcing

are

throughout

persist

to

initial

(1662)

perturbations

model

sinusoidal

quiescent

of

and

liftoff

should

It

of (t) = Ag sin wzt

dynamic

that

causes,

t

=0

= (@)

Wy

2

of

inertial

airspeed.

form

spin

and

Calculations

(64a)

Since

aynamic

to

mathematical

second.

the

or

of

are

A disturbance of

and

applies whether the disturbance 1s due to aero-

aynamic

upon

= Wov a,

(2008)

the

rockets roll

for most

scheme

used

is

rate

differ

and

in

3.2.4

sinusoidal

almost

may

somewhat

be

invariably

considered

cases

of interest.

for

the non-rolling

The

case

induced

linearly

same

can

sort

then

by

aero-

proportional

of propor-

be

used

be

noted

from

that

forcing

the

that

the

analyses

calculations of

we are considering

Chapter

presented 2's

the complete

here

Sections

TREY

thought

and

gquation

3.1.4

response

to

rather than the steady~state response only;

-— eee

A,

WaoV

=

our numerical

calculations will therefore pick up so-called he discussion transients which are not considered in t

starting of

Chapter

however,

2.

The

be greatly

basic

character

of the

response

will

not,

altered and it 1s very nearly correct to