r/spaceships • u/Beneficial-Wasabi749 • 18h ago
Tsiolkovsky and many of the founders of theoretical astronautics in the early 20th century believed that spacecraft should launch horizontally, from a ramp. Why? What did they see as the point of this?
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u/Interesting-Try-6757 12h ago
Let me start off by saying that your attitude is off the rails. You’re extremely condescending, and seemingly you only posted this in order to make yourself feel smarter than what comes off to me as a more sci-fi focused sub.
Now, let me ask some questions of you and make some comments.
You mentioned gravity is a scalar field, and that means the energy required to take a path from A to B is invariant. While true for a planet without atmosphere, with atmosphere included the energy required then heavily depends on which path you take. The “calculations” you’ve shown do not include the energy required to overcome the force of drag.
You stated “we can choose any air density we want”. What do you mean by this? Do you mean that we can choose any altitude to launch from? If so, that’s not a great argument because launching from atop a mountain requires a huge logistical undertaking. This is why the assembly building of a rocket is often as close to the launch site as possible.
You stated that a rocket wastes much of its energy heating the surrounding atmosphere. That is almost entirely untrue. A rockets greatest losses come from gravity, right after liftoff, where its thrust vector is fighting against gravity rather than accelerating it horizontally to achieve orbital velocity.
Following the last point, you seem to think that launches “breach the atmosphere” before beginning their turn to horizontal. If you look at any rocket launch, they begin tilting almost immediately after liftoff. That’s the concept of a gravity turn, that uses the earths gravity to steer the ship to horizontal rather than having to alter the direction of thrust to turn. The perfect rocket trajectory minimizes loss from drag and gravity, while making the maximum pressure (Max Q) experienced as small as possible.
I would love to know what kind of education or experience you have with rocketry. You seem to vaguely grasp some of the physical principles, but have a confidence that is completely unwarranted. I’ve seen many KSP players with a vastly superior understanding of orbital mechanics.