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United States Education Space Science

A Rocket Built By Students Reached Space For the First Time (wired.com) 55

In the early morning of April 21, 10 students from the University of Southern California's Rocket Propulsion Lab successfully launched a rocket above the Karman Line, the imaginary boundary that separates earth's atmosphere and space. As Wired reports, this is the first time a collegiate rocket has made it to space. The team may have successfully accomplished this feat last September with their Traveler III rocket, but the team "failed to activate the avionics payload, so none of its flight data got recorded." From the report: Like the Civilian Space Exploration Team, the USC lab focused on solid fuel rockets, which require far less complicated -- and dangerous -- motors than the liquid fuel rockets launched by SpaceX or Blue Origin. Some of the rockets being developed by the leaders of the collegiate space race have two stages, but the USC team opted for a single-stage rocket. If you're trying to get to orbit, which requires reaching speeds of more than 17,000 mph, a two-stage rocket is a must, so as to jettison the dead weight of empty propellant tanks. But for lower altitudes and speeds, a single-stage rocket can do the trick.

In 2013, the USC rocket team attempted its first space shot with the Traveler I, which exploded just seconds after launch. A similar fate befell Traveler II, which was launched the following year. Clearly, it was time to make some changes. Following the failure of the first two Traveler rockets, the USC team began to develop the Fathom rocket and Graveler motor as testbeds for flight systems that would be used on subsequent space shots. The Fathom rocket was effectively a scaled-down version of the Traveler rocket that allowed the USC team to build multiple rockets in quick succession to see how the subsystems worked together. After extensive ground tests, the team's Fathom II rocket set a record when it reached an altitude of 144,000 feet in 2017. Other collegiate rocket teams had reached only about 100,000 feet. The time seemed ripe to attempt another spaceshot.

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A Rocket Built By Students Reached Space For the First Time

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  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @05:29AM (#58646290)

    If you're trying to get to orbit, which requires reaching speeds of more than 17,000 mph, a two-stage rocket is a must, so as to jettison the dead weight of empty propellant tanks. But for lower altitudes and speeds, a single-stage rocket can do the trick.

    What matters is speed. Horizontal speed to be exact. The only reason rockets go up first is that contact with solid rocks (aka "mountains") is detrimental to lengthy flights and air resistance at sea level is not really comfy anymore at 27k km/h.

    Also, the higher you are, the slower you need to go to stay in orbit. But that's of a lesser concern.

  • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @09:09AM (#58647090) Journal
    ... can it launch a lawn chair? Or an old sofa? That's what we really want to know!
  • They'll forget to turn on the oxygen, or even the lights

  • by DatbeDank ( 4580343 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @11:22AM (#58647884)

    Call me when we have a propellantless means of flight. Rockets and propellants are so 20th century.

    • lolz, so first 13.85 billiion years of the Universe you mean. No flight without propulsion, no propulsion without propellants. True for comets near stars, birds, bugs and human spacecraft.

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      Call me when we have a propellantless means of flight. Rockets and propellants are so 20th century.

      [Dr Evil voice] We could use some sort of giant "laser" [/Dr Evil voice]

      Right now it's the most credible approach for interstellar travel - the big laser stays here, the ship just uses a solar sail. No new technology needed there, just a lot of patience and a really big laser.

    • by TheSync ( 5291 )

      Laser Ablation Propulsion [researchgate.net].

  • Single stage solid rocket? Are they sponsored by Estes?
  • Weak.

    Give me a cardboard tube, some balsa wood, a few sick rad decals, copious amounts of model glue, a bright plastic nose cone with a couple of streamers, and a few Estees Q engines (with igniters and plugs please, I won't use my personal extras for your contract) and I'll get some shit to space.

  • It's not anything like orbit, but they've equaled the best speeds/altitudes the world's richest man has managed to accomplish in 19 years of funding Blue Origin. Also higher than Richard Branson can make it. Not bad for a 13 foot rocket built by college kids.

Never test for an error condition you don't know how to handle. -- Steinbach

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