allows the expansion from ignition and burn against the atmosphere.
You are yet to provide any sort of rational explanation as to why it needs to push against the atmosphere or how it achieves that.
The actual reason is to provide the maximal thrust
You not liking something because it shows you are wrong doesn't make it nonsense.
Basically your ISS would be un able to sustain it's structure.
Why? that is just another pathetic assertion from you.
What makes you say it can't sustain its structure?
Is it because you need to grasp at whatever BS you can to reject reality so you can cling to your FE fantasy?
Ohhhh....and if you want to understand what would happen to a container in your so called space....or let's call it an extreme low pressure environment, all you have to do is reverse the process and apply it to a glass thermos that is under low pressure.
No, you don't. That doesn't help at all. We have been over this plenty of times already.
Crushing a container is quite different to blowing it up.
All you need to see that is a simple plastic drinking bottle.
First suck in all the air and you easily collapse the bottle.
Try try to burst the bottle and you will find no matter how hard you push, you can't.
You can even attach a pressure gauge to it and see what pressure it can take.
You will find it is far more resistant to higher pressures inside than higher pressures outside.
Now knock the welded nib off the bottom and see how fast that thermos fills with external pressure.
It's almost instant.
Because it is a tiny volume with a large hole.
Amazingly enough, size and scale is important.
A key thing to note is that the volume scales with length cubed, while the area scales with length squared.
What that means is that as a first approximation if you simply scale up the object such that a linear dimension is doubled, the volume will be multiplied by 8 and the area by 4. That means the flow rate of the gas will be multiplied by 4 while the volume it needs to fill is multiplied by 8, making it take twice as long.
Your space rocket is fantasy.
Then provide a viable alternative. Explain what is happening with the cold gas thruster. Because so far the only options are either rockets work in space, or pure nonsense.
Why would anyone need a fuel pump on a pressurised container? It makes zero sense.
It only makes 0 sense when you ignore the explanations which have already been provided.
But like I said, deal with a cold gas thruster first, then move on to more complex issues.
We know how they work on trucks and stuff, so tell me about this on a so called space rocket that somehow manages to super pump this fuel into a chamber faster than a compressed tank can release it.
You are aware it is the exact same principle, but different scales?
If it makes no sense for a rocket, it makes no sense for a truck.
If it makes sense for a truck, it makes sense for a rocket.
A burning thrust of compressed gases....in one direction only....into the atmosphere.
In one direction only, because that is the direction the rocket has pushed it into, with a resulting reaction pushing the rocket in the other direction.
No need for the atmosphere.
The gas provides the resistance.
A simple analogy would suffice to show me from your side.
Except such analogies have already been provided and you just ignore them.
Let's make this simple.
I have already made it extremely simple for you, yet you still fail to address the issue and provide a viable alternative to the reality of rockets working in space.
Again, you have a simple tube open at one end with pressurised gas inside. What happens?
Does the gas stay put? If so, what is keeping it there?
If not, then what is it pushing against to move as you have clearly indicated that you believe there is nothing for it to push off and such motion would require the atmosphere.
Until you can actually address this extremely simple case you have absolutely no basis to claim rockets cannot work in space.
So tell us, either how the gas magically stays inside an open container, or what it is pushing off which doesn't allow the rocket to work.