Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet

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Jet Fission

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #360 on: December 09, 2014, 11:54:55 AM »

So you can't think of any technical or engineering reasons why the Orion mission couldn't be carried out?  Good to know.

There is no scientific descriptions off any kind - incl. peer reviewed thesises and articles - how anything dropping from the sky at 100 000 m altitude with an initial velocity of say 7 500 m/s can slow down by friction in the atmosphere and land safely on the ground. Meteorites will simply burn up. Capsules of any kind will rotate around themselves, break up and disintegrate ... and burn up. The suggestion that a heat shield will assist is just a fairy tale. But if you can show me a heat shield that has passed the test, please do so. Try the Apollo 11 PICA heat shield patented 1965. Why didn't it burn up at re-entry?

It never re-entered anything!

Dropping a capsule with parachutes from a plane at low altitude is just plane stupid. What does it prove?

Every time you post I just keep cringing and cringing.

First of all, as for satellites in geostationary orbit, they actually orbit more slowly than the ISS. It is possible to rendezvous with those spacecraft, just as it is with the ISS.

Second of all, you do realize that when a capsule is de-orbited or when the shuttle is de-orbited, they do multiple retrograde burns to slow down right? Or else.. you know.. they would still be in orbit.

Your ignorance shines through your posts. It's sickening. All you have are flawed arguments of incredulity.
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Heiwa

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #361 on: December 09, 2014, 06:05:23 PM »

Capsules of any kind will rotate around themselves, break up and disintegrate ... and burn up.
Are you saying that a combination of reaction control thrusters and aerodynamic design aren't sufficient to control a capsule's attitude?


Yes - it is fully described at my web site. The shape of the shuttle is unstable at any speed and cannot be controlled by reaction control thrusters and computers with passengers inside looking on.

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Heiwa

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #362 on: December 09, 2014, 06:16:43 PM »


Second of all, you do realize that when a capsule is de-orbited or when the shuttle is de-orbited, they do multiple retrograde burns to slow down right? Or else.. you know.. they would still be in orbit.



Of course I know this. And neither a capsule nor a Shuttle has sufficient fuel aboard to do retrograde burns to slow down at re-entry. They are going much too fast. You cannot stop any object with speed >7 000 m/s using a rocket engine/fuel aboard and friction against atmosphere just burns you up.

Do you know how much energy is required to accelerate a mass 1 kg to 7 000 m/s speed? Right 24.5 MJ! And the same amount of energy is required to slow it down to 0 m/s. Imagine the amount of energy required to stop an 8 500 kg Orion capsule.

I am amazed at all participants believing in space travel above and that re-entry is possible.



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mikeman7918

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #363 on: December 09, 2014, 06:37:31 PM »


Second of all, you do realize that when a capsule is de-orbited or when the shuttle is de-orbited, they do multiple retrograde burns to slow down right? Or else.. you know.. they would still be in orbit.



Of course I know this. And neither a capsule nor a Shuttle has sufficient fuel aboard to do retrograde burns to slow down at re-entry. They are going much too fast. You cannot stop any object with speed >7 000 m/s using a rocket engine/fuel aboard and friction against atmosphere just burns you up.

Do you know how much energy is required to accelerate a mass 1 kg to 7 000 m/s speed? Right 24.5 MJ! And the same amount of energy is required to slow it down to 0 m/s. Imagine the amount of energy required to stop an 8 500 kg Orion capsule.

I am amazed at all participants believing in space travel above and that re-entry is possible.
Have you seen my post where I posted a Wikipedia article on reentry?  It explains (among other things) concepts like ablative shielding and the aerodynamics involved.  I would recommend that you read up on reentry before you pretend to be the local expert.

By the way, I can't find where your website is listed on your profile.  Could you please give me a link to it, because i am really interested to know why you think that a space shuttle is aerodynamically unstable.  It is really back heavy because of the engines, which is why the wings have to be so far back to be at the center of mass, which makes the shuttle look like it can't fly, but there are " class="bbc_link" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">videos of space shuttles landing and spectators are invited to these events.
« Last Edit: December 09, 2014, 06:46:37 PM by mikeman7918 »
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Heiwa

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #364 on: December 09, 2014, 06:57:52 PM »

By the way, I can't find where your website is listed on your profile.  Could you please give me a link to it, because i am really interested to know why you think that a space shuttle is aerodynamically unstable.  It is really back heavy because of the engines, which is why the wings have to be so far back to be at the center of mass, which makes the shuttle look like it can't fly, but there are " class="bbc_link" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">videos of space shuttles landing and spectators are invited to these events.

Thanks for asking! Start reading chapters 1.12+ and 2.3+ at http://heiwaco.com/moontravel.htm and you'll find out my thoughts about capsules and shuttles returning from space trying to land on Earth ... and why it is not possible.

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mikeman7918

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #365 on: December 09, 2014, 07:52:38 PM »

By the way, I can't find where your website is listed on your profile.  Could you please give me a link to it, because i am really interested to know why you think that a space shuttle is aerodynamically unstable.  It is really back heavy because of the engines, which is why the wings have to be so far back to be at the center of mass, which makes the shuttle look like it can't fly, but there are " class="bbc_link" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">videos of space shuttles landing and spectators are invited to these events.

Thanks for asking! Start reading chapters 1.12+ and 2.3+ at http://heiwaco.com/moontravel.htm and you'll find out my thoughts about capsules and shuttles returning from space trying to land on Earth ... and why it is not possible.
I have read the specified articles on your website and I have noticed some issues with your reasoning.

On the first article, there was a distinct lack of math and instead there were a lot of "I have the feeling", which makes most of your conclusions there based off of an assumption rather then any actual evidence.  You also failed to state your sources for the information that needed it the most like the "NASA can't explain this" statements.  Math is an amazing thing because you can use it to put logic on paper, so please use that instead of your feelings.

On the second article, you demonstrated your lack of general knowledge about the space shuttle.  I am a major engineering and space enthusiast who has spent countless hours studying this stuff, so let my do some clarifying.  You did mention that you had no idea what a plasma trail is, so I will explain that first.  Plasma is a state of matter that you get by heating up a gas, it is any matter that is so hot that the atomic nuclei can't hold on to any electrons and it also glows, and it is basically the glowing part of a fire.  Objects reentering the atmosphere leave a trail of plasma because of all of the heat involved that glows and can be seen from the ground, it's the reason that meteors (shooting stars) appear to glow as they streak across the sky.  One thing that you demonstrated a lack of understanding on is how the space shuttle's windows do not melt during reentry, and the reason for that is that the nose of the shuttle takes a lot of the beating because of the angle that it reenters at and also the windows are at an angle and so they don't really hit a lot of the incoming air and the air they do hit hardly get's deflected and pressurized, and the rapid pressurization is where all of the heat comes from.  You also never mentioned why you thought that the picture from the ISS of the shuttle reentering was faked other then you thought that it looked like it and it conflicts with your theory.
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markjo

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #366 on: December 09, 2014, 08:04:02 PM »
Thanks for asking! Start reading chapters 1.12+ and 2.3+ at http://heiwaco.com/moontravel.htm and you'll find out my thoughts about capsules and shuttles returning from space trying to land on Earth ... and why it is not possible.
I see lots of hand waving and lots of denial, but I don't see anything resembling actual proof that atmospheric reentry is an engineering challenge that is impossible to overcome.
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Heiwa

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #367 on: December 09, 2014, 09:04:55 PM »
You did mention that you had no idea what a plasma trail is, so I will explain that first.  Plasma is a state of matter that you get by heating up a gas, it is any matter that is so hot that the atomic nuclei can't hold on to any electrons and it also glows, and it is basically the glowing part of a fire.  Objects reentering the atmosphere leave a trail of plasma because of all of the heat involved that glows and can be seen from the ground, it's the reason that meteors (shooting stars) appear to glow as they streak across the sky. 

One thing that you demonstrated a lack of understanding on is how the space shuttle's windows do not melt during reentry, and the reason for that is that the nose of the shuttle takes a lot of the beating because of the angle that it reenters at and also the windows are at an angle and so they don't really hit a lot of the incoming air and the air they do hit hardly get's deflected and pressurized, and the rapid pressurization is where all of the heat comes from.  You also never mentioned why you thought that the picture from the ISS of the shuttle reentering was faked other then you thought that it looked like it and it conflicts with your theory.

Plasma - according Wikipedia, LOL, it is loosely described as an electrically neutral medium of unbound positive and negative particles (i.e. the overall charge of a plasma is roughly zero) and I doubt it leaves a trail after a Shuttle. Plasma trails are just SF nonsense - sometimes/often I am quite ironic and sardonic about the NASA lingo.

If you believe the Shuttle cockpit windows can resist hitting atmosphere at 7 000 m/s velocity producing a plasma trail, be my guest. Solid water hitting the flat bow of a ship at 10 m/s velocity makes a lot of noise, I know from experience. The Shuttle structure would not resist 300-400 m/s velocity in air and break apart at a little higher speed. It is 78 000 kg of junk! Probably less but junk all the way.





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mikeman7918

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #369 on: December 09, 2014, 09:31:12 PM »
You did mention that you had no idea what a plasma trail is, so I will explain that first.  Plasma is a state of matter that you get by heating up a gas, it is any matter that is so hot that the atomic nuclei can't hold on to any electrons and it also glows, and it is basically the glowing part of a fire.  Objects reentering the atmosphere leave a trail of plasma because of all of the heat involved that glows and can be seen from the ground, it's the reason that meteors (shooting stars) appear to glow as they streak across the sky. 

One thing that you demonstrated a lack of understanding on is how the space shuttle's windows do not melt during reentry, and the reason for that is that the nose of the shuttle takes a lot of the beating because of the angle that it reenters at and also the windows are at an angle and so they don't really hit a lot of the incoming air and the air they do hit hardly get's deflected and pressurized, and the rapid pressurization is where all of the heat comes from.  You also never mentioned why you thought that the picture from the ISS of the shuttle reentering was faked other then you thought that it looked like it and it conflicts with your theory.

Plasma - according Wikipedia, LOL, it is loosely described as an electrically neutral medium of unbound positive and negative particles (i.e. the overall charge of a plasma is roughly zero) and I doubt it leaves a trail after a Shuttle. Plasma trails are just SF nonsense - sometimes/often I am quite ironic and sardonic about the NASA lingo.

If you believe the Shuttle cockpit windows can resist hitting atmosphere at 7 000 m/s velocity producing a plasma trail, be my guest. Solid water hitting the flat bow of a ship at 10 m/s velocity makes a lot of noise, I know from experience. The Shuttle structure would not resist 300-400 m/s velocity in air and break apart at a little higher speed. It is 78 000 kg of junk! Probably less but junk all the way.
If plasma trails are SF nonsense, then what are the glowing trails left by meteors?  Are meteor showers created by the government as a part of the conspiracy?  By the way, what experience has led you to believe that a space shuttle won't survive reentry?  At least show some math to back you up because math is considered concrete evidence.
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Alpha2Omega

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #370 on: December 09, 2014, 09:32:47 PM »
I have read the specified articles on your website and I have noticed some issues with your reasoning.

On the first article, there was a distinct lack of math and instead there were a lot of "I have the feeling", which makes most of your conclusions there based off of an assumption rather then any actual evidence.  You also failed to state your sources for the information that needed it the most like the "NASA can't explain this" statements.  Math is an amazing thing because you can use it to put logic on paper, so please use that instead of your feelings.

You did mention that you had no idea what a plasma trail is, so I will explain that first.  Plasma is a state of matter that you get by heating up a gas, it is any matter that is so hot that the atomic nuclei can't hold on to any electrons and it also glows, and it is basically the glowing part of a fire.  Objects reentering the atmosphere leave a trail of plasma because of all of the heat involved that glows and can be seen from the ground, it's the reason that meteors (shooting stars) appear to glow as they streak across the sky. 

One thing that you demonstrated a lack of understanding on is how the space shuttle's windows do not melt during reentry, and the reason for that is that the nose of the shuttle takes a lot of the beating because of the angle that it reenters at and also the windows are at an angle and so they don't really hit a lot of the incoming air and the air they do hit hardly get's deflected and pressurized, and the rapid pressurization is where all of the heat comes from.  You also never mentioned why you thought that the picture from the ISS of the shuttle reentering was faked other then you thought that it looked like it and it conflicts with your theory.

Plasma - according Wikipedia, LOL, it is loosely described as an electrically neutral medium of unbound positive and negative particles (i.e. the overall charge of a plasma is roughly zero) and I doubt it leaves a trail after a Shuttle. Plasma trails are just SF nonsense - sometimes/often I am quite ironic and sardonic about the NASA lingo.
And, you walk right into what mikeman had just finished describing. Way to go!

Do you have any calculations or evidence that this is true, or do you just "doubt" it?

Quote
If you believe the Shuttle cockpit windows can resist hitting atmosphere at 7 000 m/s velocity producing a plasma trail, be my guest. Solid water hitting the flat bow of a ship at 10 m/s velocity makes a lot of noise, I know from experience.

You may not realize it, but the Space Shuttle was not an oceangoing ship with a flat bow.  Do you know for a fact the shuttle's windows were exposed directly to 7,000 m/s atmosphere? Can you cite a reference for this (other than your own website)? You work with oceangoing vessels, or so you claim. That's what you claim to know. The old adage that "if your only tool is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail" seems to be in full effect here.

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The Shuttle structure would not resist 300-400 m/s velocity in air and break apart at a little higher speed.
[citation needed]

Quote
It is 78 000 kg of junk! Probably less but junk all the way.

Thanks for sharing your opinion.
"Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not to his own facts." - Daniel Patrick Moynihan

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mikeman7918

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #371 on: December 09, 2014, 10:06:50 PM »
It is 78 000 kg of junk! Probably less but junk all the way.
That's exactly how I would describe your reasoning.
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Antonio

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #372 on: December 10, 2014, 12:47:55 AM »
Do you know how much energy is required to accelerate a mass 1 kg to 7 000 m/s speed? Right 24.5 MJ!
Can you do the math for a starting mass of 1 kg at 0m/s  and a final mass of 0.5 kg at 7000 m/s considering a constant rate of mass loss ?

And by the way, what would be the final speed and energy of a rocket weighting 1000 kg , including  500 kg of fuel, burning it with an ejection speed of 4500 m/s ? (commmon value for oxygen/hydrogen rocket engines)

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Lemmiwinks

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #373 on: December 10, 2014, 03:01:41 PM »
Do you know how much energy is required to accelerate a mass 1 kg to 7 000 m/s speed? Right 24.5 MJ!
Can you do the math for a starting mass of 1 kg at 0m/s  and a final mass of 0.5 kg at 7000 m/s considering a constant rate of mass loss ?

And by the way, what would be the final speed and energy of a rocket weighting 1000 kg , including  500 kg of fuel, burning it with an ejection speed of 4500 m/s ? (commmon value for oxygen/hydrogen rocket engines)

The day he can do those equations; let alone come up with it being impossible as he "predicts" is the day that the world ends.
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dephelis

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #374 on: December 10, 2014, 04:12:23 PM »
Do you know how much energy is required to accelerate a mass 1 kg to 7 000 m/s speed? Right 24.5 MJ!
Can you do the math for a starting mass of 1 kg at 0m/s  and a final mass of 0.5 kg at 7000 m/s considering a constant rate of mass loss ?

And by the way, what would be the final speed and energy of a rocket weighting 1000 kg , including  500 kg of fuel, burning it with an ejection speed of 4500 m/s ? (commmon value for oxygen/hydrogen rocket engines)

That doesn't matter so much as the shuttle didn't reduce it's speed to 0 m/s for rentry.

Assuming a fully fuel laden shuttle massing around 585,000 kg and carrying 103,000 kg of LH2 in a low earth orbit at 7,800 m/s. H2 has a combustion energy value of 141,000 KJ/kg. The shuttle needs to reduce it's orbital velocity from 7,800 m/s to around 4,700 m/s for re-entry.

So:
Energy required for de-orbit = 1/2 x 585,000 x (7,800-4700)2 = 2.81 TJ

Energy available = 103,000 x 141,000 = 14.5 TJ

That's enough energy for 5 de-orbit burns. Even if you reduce the fuel to 25% of capacity it would still amount to over 3 TJ of energy, still enough to deorbit without even correcting the mass of the shuttle.

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Lemmiwinks

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #375 on: December 10, 2014, 04:28:05 PM »
Do you know how much energy is required to accelerate a mass 1 kg to 7 000 m/s speed? Right 24.5 MJ!
Can you do the math for a starting mass of 1 kg at 0m/s  and a final mass of 0.5 kg at 7000 m/s considering a constant rate of mass loss ?

And by the way, what would be the final speed and energy of a rocket weighting 1000 kg , including  500 kg of fuel, burning it with an ejection speed of 4500 m/s ? (commmon value for oxygen/hydrogen rocket engines)

That doesn't matter so much as the shuttle didn't reduce it's speed to 0 m/s for rentry.

Assuming a fully fuel laden shuttle massing around 585,000 kg and carrying 103,000 kg of LH2 in a low earth orbit at 7,800 m/s. H2 has a combustion energy value of 141,000 KJ/kg. The shuttle needs to reduce it's orbital velocity from 7,800 m/s to around 4,700 m/s for re-entry.

So:
Energy required for de-orbit = 1/2 x 585,000 x (7,800-4700)2 = 2.81 TJ

Energy available = 103,000 x 141,000 = 14.5 TJ

That's enough energy for 5 de-orbit burns. Even if you reduce the fuel to 25% of capacity it would still amount to over 3 TJ of energy, still enough to deorbit without even correcting the mass of the shuttle.

Obviously NASAs demons and hell-beasts have brainwashed you.
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Alpha2Omega

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #376 on: December 10, 2014, 06:10:05 PM »
Do you know how much energy is required to accelerate a mass 1 kg to 7 000 m/s speed? Right 24.5 MJ!
Can you do the math for a starting mass of 1 kg at 0m/s  and a final mass of 0.5 kg at 7000 m/s considering a constant rate of mass loss ?

And by the way, what would be the final speed and energy of a rocket weighting 1000 kg , including  500 kg of fuel, burning it with an ejection speed of 4500 m/s ? (commmon value for oxygen/hydrogen rocket engines)

That doesn't matter so much as the shuttle didn't reduce it's speed to 0 m/s for rentry.

Assuming a fully fuel laden shuttle massing around 585,000 kg and carrying 103,000 kg of LH2 in a low earth orbit at 7,800 m/s. H2 has a combustion energy value of 141,000 KJ/kg. The shuttle needs to reduce it's orbital velocity from 7,800 m/s to around 4,700 m/s for re-entry.

So:
Energy required for de-orbit = 1/2 x 585,000 x (7,800-4700)2 = 2.81 TJ

Energy available = 103,000 x 141,000 = 14.5 TJ

That's enough energy for 5 de-orbit burns. Even if you reduce the fuel to 25% of capacity it would still amount to over 3 TJ of energy, still enough to deorbit without even correcting the mass of the shuttle.

24.5 MJ(!) This sounds impressive! Wow!

Except that...

1 J is a very small amount of energy. Running a 100-watt light bulb for one hour uses 360 KJ (0.36 MJ) of energy. That's about $0.01 worth of electricity at retail[nb]$0.10 per kw-h is a reasonable estimate in the US[/nb].

24.5 MJ is enough energy to light a 100-watt bulb for 68 hours, a few hours less than three days continuously. A little less than 70 cents worth of electricity represents the amount of energy it takes to accelerate a mass of 1 kg to 7,000 m/s.

This is typical of Heiwa and the likes of sceptimatic. Toss out big, impressive-sounding numbers and declare "See how stupid this is!!!" This is no different than stating the size of a typical soccer [futbol, football] pitch in microns and declaring "Do you realize that a so-called football pitch is 100 million microns long! That's 100 Megamicrons!! OMG!!! How stupid do they think we are?? Such a thing is simply too big to even exist on earth!!!!!" Don't fall for it.  Sometimes the numbers are big, but what do they mean, especially in context?
 
 
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Heiwa

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #377 on: December 12, 2014, 12:21:15 AM »

And by the way, what would be the final speed and energy of a rocket weighting 1000 kg , including  500 kg of fuel, burning it with an ejection speed of 4500 m/s ? (commmon value for oxygen/hydrogen rocket engines)

If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.


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Antonio

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #378 on: December 12, 2014, 12:47:14 AM »
If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.

Care to give the maths for this result please?
« Last Edit: December 12, 2014, 12:49:29 AM by Antonio »

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Heiwa

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #379 on: December 12, 2014, 01:51:32 AM »
If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.

Care to give the maths for this result please?

Pls do it yourself! Tip - deduct the kinetic energy of fuel, which is lost into space while braking, from the original kinetic energy of the 1000 kg mass to obtain the kinetic energy of the mass 500 kg with no fuel left aboard.

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Antonio

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #380 on: December 12, 2014, 02:18:21 AM »
If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.

Care to give the maths for this result please?

Pls do it yourself! Tip - deduct the kinetic energy of fuel, which is lost into space while braking, from the original kinetic energy of the 1000 kg mass to obtain the kinetic energy of the mass 500 kg with no fuel left aboard.

I'm finding very different results, that's why I'm kindly requesting your math, as I suspect some mistakes from it

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Heiwa

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #381 on: December 12, 2014, 02:39:24 AM »
If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.

Care to give the maths for this result please?

Pls do it yourself! Tip - deduct the kinetic energy of fuel, which is lost into space while braking, from the original kinetic energy of the 1000 kg mass to obtain the kinetic energy of the mass 500 kg with no fuel left aboard.

I'm finding very different results, that's why I'm kindly requesting your math, as I suspect some mistakes from it

There is only one result - 5362 m/s (or maybe 5256 m/s?). If you get other results (sic) you are mistaken. Try again!
 

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JimmyTheCrab

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #382 on: December 12, 2014, 04:23:26 AM »
If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.

Care to give the maths for this result please?

Pls do it yourself! Tip - deduct the kinetic energy of fuel, which is lost into space while braking, from the original kinetic energy of the 1000 kg mass to obtain the kinetic energy of the mass 500 kg with no fuel left aboard.

I'm finding very different results, that's why I'm kindly requesting your math, as I suspect some mistakes from it

There is only one result - 5362 m/s (or maybe 5256 m/s?). If you get other results (sic) you are mistaken. Try again!
lol

So you haven't done the maths?
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Heiwa

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #383 on: December 12, 2014, 05:30:04 AM »
If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.

Care to give the maths for this result please?

Pls do it yourself! Tip - deduct the kinetic energy of fuel, which is lost into space while braking, from the original kinetic energy of the 1000 kg mass to obtain the kinetic energy of the mass 500 kg with no fuel left aboard.

I'm finding very different results, that's why I'm kindly requesting your math, as I suspect some mistakes from it

There is only one result - 5362 m/s (or maybe 5256 m/s?). If you get other results (sic) you are mistaken. Try again!
lol

So you haven't done the maths?

No, I have done the maths in my head as usual - one result 5362, one 5256. About the same. Please use your brain in your head when calculating. How else can you do maths?

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inquisitive

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #384 on: December 12, 2014, 05:58:50 AM »
If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.

Care to give the maths for this result please?

Pls do it yourself! Tip - deduct the kinetic energy of fuel, which is lost into space while braking, from the original kinetic energy of the 1000 kg mass to obtain the kinetic energy of the mass 500 kg with no fuel left aboard.

I'm finding very different results, that's why I'm kindly requesting your math, as I suspect some mistakes from it

There is only one result - 5362 m/s (or maybe 5256 m/s?). If you get other results (sic) you are mistaken. Try again!
lol

So you haven't done the maths?

No, I have done the maths in my head as usual - one result 5362, one 5256. About the same. Please use your brain in your head when calculating. How else can you do maths?
Just show the calculation.

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JimmyTheCrab

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #385 on: December 12, 2014, 06:32:11 AM »
If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.

Care to give the maths for this result please?

Pls do it yourself! Tip - deduct the kinetic energy of fuel, which is lost into space while braking, from the original kinetic energy of the 1000 kg mass to obtain the kinetic energy of the mass 500 kg with no fuel left aboard.

I'm finding very different results, that's why I'm kindly requesting your math, as I suspect some mistakes from it

There is only one result - 5362 m/s (or maybe 5256 m/s?). If you get other results (sic) you are mistaken. Try again!
lol

So you haven't done the maths?

No, I have done the maths in my head as usual - one result 5362, one 5256. About the same. Please use your brain in your head when calculating. How else can you do maths?
If you have done the maths, then show your working.  It just looks like you are bullshitting otherwise.
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Antonio

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #386 on: December 12, 2014, 10:08:32 AM »
If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.

Care to give the maths for this result please?

Pls do it yourself! Tip - deduct the kinetic energy of fuel, which is lost into space while braking, from the original kinetic energy of the 1000 kg mass to obtain the kinetic energy of the mass 500 kg with no fuel left aboard.

I'm finding very different results, that's why I'm kindly requesting your math, as I suspect some mistakes from it

There is only one result - 5362 m/s (or maybe 5256 m/s?). If you get other results (sic) you are mistaken. Try again!
Please enlighten me, explain me how you get these results, as I'm the one mistaken.

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Lemmiwinks

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #387 on: December 12, 2014, 10:18:23 AM »
If the initial speed of mass 1000 kg was 7000 m/s, I suggest the final speed of the remaining 500 kg is 5362 m/s (after dropping off 500 kg fuel as hot gases), i.e. a 23.4% speed reduction. It is not easy to brake or slow down in space.

Care to give the maths for this result please?

Pls do it yourself! Tip - deduct the kinetic energy of fuel, which is lost into space while braking, from the original kinetic energy of the 1000 kg mass to obtain the kinetic energy of the mass 500 kg with no fuel left aboard.

I'm finding very different results, that's why I'm kindly requesting your math, as I suspect some mistakes from it

There is only one result - 5362 m/s (or maybe 5256 m/s?). If you get other results (sic) you are mistaken. Try again!
lol

So you haven't done the maths?

No, I have done the maths in my head as usual - one result 5362, one 5256. About the same. Please use your brain in your head when calculating. How else can you do maths?

Pencil, paper and calculator Heiwa. Thats the only way to do it so you can then go back over it and verify you didnt make any errors.

No wonder you come up with such wildly inaccurate numbers.
I have 13 [academic qualifications] actually. I'll leave it up to you to guess which, or simply call me a  liar. Either is fine.

Quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur

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Heiwa

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #388 on: December 12, 2014, 10:48:18 AM »


Pencil, paper and calculator Heiwa. Thats the only way to do it so you can then go back over it and verify you didnt make any errors.

No wonder you come up with such wildly inaccurate numbers.

Paper and pen? Calculator?? Inaccurate numbers??? What's wrong with a fresh brain and using it for simple calculations? Anyway, plenty of people above think they know the answer and are therefore invited to present the calculations to reach it. It is simple astrophysics:
A. Calculate the kinetic energy of the total mass 1000 kg spacecraft at 7000 m/s velocity relative Earth in space (mv²/2).
B. Calculate the kinetic energy of the fuel mass 500 kg after it has been ejected from the spacecraft as hot gas at velocity 4500 m/s relative the spacecraft polluting the space at 2500 m/s velocity relative Earth and having slowed down the space craft to unknown speed.
A-B is then the kinetic energy of the 500 kg spacecraft after braking (ejection of 500 kg fuel as hot gas), speed of which is easy to find (sqr((2(A-B)/500))).

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Antonio

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Re: Rosetta's Philae probe makes historic landing on comet
« Reply #389 on: December 12, 2014, 03:19:14 PM »


Pencil, paper and calculator Heiwa. Thats the only way to do it so you can then go back over it and verify you didnt make any errors.

No wonder you come up with such wildly inaccurate numbers.

Paper and pen? Calculator?? Inaccurate numbers??? What's wrong with a fresh brain and using it for simple calculations? Anyway, plenty of people above think they know the answer and are therefore invited to present the calculations to reach it. It is simple astrophysics:
A. Calculate the kinetic energy of the total mass 1000 kg spacecraft at 7000 m/s velocity relative Earth in space (mv²/2).
B. Calculate the kinetic energy of the fuel mass 500 kg after it has been ejected from the spacecraft as hot gas at velocity 4500 m/s relative the spacecraft polluting the space at 2500 m/s velocity relative Earth and having slowed down the space craft to unknown speed.
A-B is then the kinetic energy of the 500 kg spacecraft after braking (ejection of 500 kg fuel as hot gas), speed of which is easy to find (sqr((2(A-B)/500))).

Ok I see.....
Let's validate your math with the same numbers except the initial speed set to -say-  1638 m/s. (7000m/s-5362m/s)
As the speed variation should remain the same, you should find a final velocity of 0 m/s don't you ?

Edit : bad numbers...
 
« Last Edit: December 12, 2014, 10:19:49 PM by Antonio »