Pick something and I'll happily deal with it.
I have, and you refused. Instead you just repeatedly ignored it.
I want you to explain what the gas is pushing off for a rocket in a vacuum. I have repeatedly asked you for this and made it clear this is the key issue.
Yet you repeatedly ignore it because you know you can't provide an answer. So stop saying you will happily deal with it when you wont.
Instead of answering it you just try and derail with horribly flawed analogies and trying to change the subject.
If you just want to deal with 1 thing, then deal with this as this what the topic is actually about.
Again:
You have previously provided the non-answers of "the gas" and "itself".
Well if the gas can push against itself that means that objects can push against themselves to move, so the rocket can push against itself and there is no problem with rockets working in a vacuum. But you have previously stated that objects CANNOT push themselves and used that as a key argument for why rockets can't work in a vacuum, so that non-answer directly contradicts your claims and, if taken as true, refutes your own argument.
If it can push against the gas, then the gas is something that can be used as leverage, which means the rocket can use it as leverage and push off it to move so once again rockets work in a vacuum.
And that really is the killer.
In general you have 3 options to explain the motion of the gas.
1 - Itself, which is already dealt with above.
2 - The rocket, which means the gas is pushing on the rocket and thus the rocket will be pushed away by it and thus rockets work in a vacuum.
3 - Something else, which is covered by the gas, where this something else is being used as leverage and thus the rocket can use it as well.
Any option you pick will mean the rocket works in a vacuum.
The rocket doesn't squeeze anything out.
But without the rocket forcing the gas out, there is nothing to do so.
The best you can do to avoid that is have the gas use the rocket as leverage to push the gas closer to the opening out.
The gas inside the rocket is allowed to decompress once the valve is opened.
You keep saying that but avoid the key part of what the gas is pushing against to get out.
The rocket merely sits atop this.
Then how does it get pushed up?
You need something touching the rocket to push it up. The only thing there is the gas.
The outside pressure has everything to do with the reaction to the thrust. It's why everything works, not just a rocket.
No, it is a fairly minor factor limiting the amount of thrust you can get out of it.
Ok, if a rocket thrusts it's fuel into that stack it parts the stack. It opens it up....or to give you a visual, it parts the water.
I'm sure you understand this which is easily verified using ant thrust.
So it doesn't push it down, it just splits it apart. That means it compresses sideways and would try to expand back sideways, not upwards.
This bulge of this stack pushes back and as it does so it starts to push the water back up from the point of the bottom of the delve, upwards.
Again, this clearly isn't the case.
We don't see the water from a water rocket flying up. It goes down.
But the other issue is what about the other way?
You have the rocket pushing up into the stack. Why doesn't the stack just push it back down?
Again, your claims make no sense at all.
If what you are saying is true, motion should be basically impossible with the air pushing you back whenever you try to move through it.
What actually makes sense is the mainstream explanation, which you are yet to show any actual problem with it. The gas, which applies pressure outwards in all directions, applies pressure to the rocket which is unbalanced as there is an opening on one side, making it move upwards.
The gas exits on its own.
How?
Is it sentient?
How does the gas just manage to move itself?
Why can't the rocket do the same?
Each molecule or gas decompresses against each molecule in a chain reaction.
So not by itself, it is the gas behind it pushing it out, which eventually goes down to the rocket, i.e. the rocket pushes the gas out.
Stop trying to stop the chain reaction before it reaches the rocket.
No I'm not contradicting myself.
Really?
You just did in that post.
Now to answer your question.
When 1000 liters under the pressure of 1000 PSI pushes 1 liter out, the remaining 999 liters didn't push it out, the liter on the outside went out on it's own "by decompressing against the quantity that's still inside for now".
Yes it did.
The remaining 999 litres did push it out
Notice the direct contradiction?
First, "the remaining 999 liters didn't push it out"
followed by "The remaining 999 litres did push it out"
A direct contradiction.
So which is it? Did the remaining 999 litres push it out or not?
You can't have both.
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It's not positively pushing.
Stop using your fake definitions and bringing in positive or negative. Start using the real definitions which other people here are using.
It is pushing, plain and simple. There is still pressure acting on the gauge.