Pluto Probe Delayed 23
setirw writes "Due to high wind conditions at the launching site, the launch of the NASA's probe to Pluto has been delayed for 24 hours. "The wind limit at the pad is 33 knots [and] we have exceeded that limit several times today," said NASA spokesman Bruce Buckingham." From the article: "Glitches with an Atlas 5 vent valve, a ground tracking station in Antigua and NASA's Deep Space Network also led to launch delays, though the wind concerns were omnipresent throughout those issues."
Huh? (Score:1)
So why does a horizonal force of wind have any effect on the vertical force of the thrusters? Won't the probe just end up exiting the atmosphere a few feet to the left or right, if at all?
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
If windsheer is enough to affect a plane landing on a runway, I feel it's safe to assume its a gamble to launch an expensive piece of kit under windy conditions.
Either that of NASA should try making really big space kites.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
wind limits on rocket lauches (Score:4, Informative)
The structural forces placed on the structure from side winds are negligible when compared to the acceleration forces due to lauch.
For the most part, it's not the final trajectory of the payload that sets them, as secondary burns and mid-course corrections are more than adequate to correct any small variation in the launch vector.
More importantly is stablity of the rocket under side forces. Because of a rocket's tall slender build, the center of mass is far away from point of thrust (the engine nozzles). Any small horizontal motion of the center of mass with respect to the point of thrust can quickly lead to tumbling. It's this control problem that really determines the launch limits. A rocket is inherently unstable and requires dynamic control, typically small engines around the periphery of the main nozzle that can swivel to provide righting moment. As with any real control system there are limits to the perturbation it can handle, and this is translated into wind speed limits.
Re:wind limits on rocket lauches (Score:3)
Negligible compared to acceleration forces is not the the same as trivial. (Especially since the wind forces manifest themselves in a direction other than that where the rocket is strongest - along the vertical axis.) Side loads can and do induce body bending and a var
For the rocket scientists out there.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:For the rocket scientists out there.... (Score:3, Informative)
It will be in the vicinity of Pluto for longer than a day - it won't be very close for that time, but it will be more than close enough for the work they want to do.
Re:For the rocket scientists out there.... (Score:4, Informative)
Quoth the parent:
In brief, yes.
(Warning: back-of-the-envelope calculations follow)
In order to reach Pluto in a reasonable number of years, the probe must move very fast. Let's see ...
very roughly, it goes 40 AU in nine years. That's about
4.5 AU per year, or a cruising speed of about 21,000 m/s.
If you wanted to put it in orbit around Pluto, you'd have to decrease its speed to the orbital speed of Pluto, which would be a few hundred m/s. That means you'd have to decrease the speed by roughly 20,000 m/s ... or, to a good
approximation, you'd have to remove all the velocity you
had added to the probe in the first place. The mass of
the probe is roughly 1,000 kg, so its momentum must
be decreased from about (20,000 m/s) * (1,000 kg) = about
20 million kg*m/s to zero.
To reduce the momentum, you fire an engine pointing backwards: the engine throws exhaust products forward at some speed, and the momentum they carry away reduces the remaining momentum of the probe. Chemical rockets have typical exhaust speeds of around 2,000 m/s, so to remove 20 million kg*m/s, you'd have to throw around 10,000 kg of mass out of your engine. (Yes, yes, it's more complicated than this, but for the purpose of illustration, it's close enough).
But, wait a minute: the probe's mass is only 1,000 kg. It can't carry 10,000 kg of fuel and oxidizer, too. So it cannot slow itself down enough to enter orbit around Pluto. If you wanted to design a probe which could enter orbit, you'd have to make it carry huge amounts of fuel for this burn when it reaches Pluto ... but then
you'd need an enormous rocket to accelerate the
fuel and probe to 20,000 m/s in the first place.
It just isn't practical. Sorry.
Re:For the rocket scientists out there.... (Score:1)
Is there some fairly simple metric of "efficiency" of a rocket? I know with jet engines we like to get m
Re:For the rocket scientists out there.... (Score:2)
NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe has said repeatedly that he favors putting off the mission until sometime next decade when nuclear propulsion systems could enable a probe to reach the distant planet faster and stay there longer.
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/solarsystem / pluto_options_020128-1.html [space.com]
Re:For the rocket scientists out there.... (Score:2)
SB
Re:For the rocket scientists out there.... (Score:1)
Re:For the rocket scientists out there.... (Score:1)
Actually, the "25K mi/hr for escape velocity" is irrelevant for these purposes; what makes it an escape velocity, after all, is that that's how much speed will be lost if it escapes from Earth. So something launched at exactly escape velocity will asymptotically approach 0 mi/hr; something launched at 26K mi/hr will approach 1K mi/hr (assuming the accuracy of 25K mi/hr).
And of course, anything l
Re:For the rocket scientists out there.... (Score:2)
If we make an orbiter without knowing some of the basics, we may send a big honking magnetometer and a camera (for example.) If Pluto has no magnetic field, and doesn't visually change much over time,
Re:For the rocket scientists out there.... (Score:2)
Uranus? (Score:1)
Launch scrubbed for Wednesday as well (Score:3, Informative)
(see http://www.floridatoday.com/floridatoday/blogs/pl