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DougM, Fun & Curios

Stuff That’s Hard to Do (Falcon9 Starlink)

August 9, 2022

Routine night launch,
so no awesome views of Earth

3 THOUGHTS ON “Stuff That’s Hard to Do (Falcon9 Starlink)”

  • Henk Vandenbergh says:
    August 9, 2022 at 8:33 pm

    Doug, 1:04 into the flight, was that the visual transition through the speed of sound? Or was that the throttling down for MaxQ? I have never seen or noticed that. No matter what, beautiful sight.

  • DougM (just entertaining myself here) says:
    August 9, 2022 at 10:28 pm

    Henk ^
    Glad you asked.
    I almost pointed that out.

    It’s a combination of the pressure wave generated by the vehicle’s shape and speed at a critical point of relative humidity. When the pressure drops suddenly, water vapor can briefly condense into that visible cloud ring. Usually see it with rockets around the time it’s trans-sonic

    Yeah, this time it went through a few layers of different humidities, so it was doggone cool

  • DougM (just entertaining myself here) says:
    August 9, 2022 at 10:42 pm

    Also:
    Max-Q is the point of maximum dynamic pressure for that trajectory.
    It’s a major design point for structures and control-systems engineers,
    so it gets some attention in the narration.

    Q = 1/2 (air density) (speed squared)

    speed = 0 at liftoff, and
    air density = 0 in space,
    so there must be a maximum for Q somewhere during ascent

    Next Week: the speed of sound as a function of density, temperature, altitude, and funding
    (What? Well, I’ll need a week to read-up on that stuff. Been a looong time)

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