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rocket power
Rocket Words: 287
Rocket Power

The action of the gases exhausting from a rocket's nozzles at great speed produces 
a reaction of equal force against the inner walls of the rocket, and it is this 
force which propels it. This is why the rocket is the only suitable 
device for space travel it is completely self-contained and independent of any 
external force for its power. 

An airplane must have air to sustain it in flight and to provide the oxygen needed 
to make its fuel burn. But the rocket needs nothing. It does not need air to support 
it, and it car�ries its own oxidizer right on board.

The reaction force or push produced by a rocket engine is called thrust, and this 
power is expressed in terms of pounds. The thrust power of a rocket in�dicates how 
much weight it is capable of moving at or near the surface of the earth. If a 
particular rocket engine has a thrust of 100,000 pounds, this means it can lift 
or propel that much weight.

Our rocket-propelled missiles of today operate much like a bullet or an artillery 
shell. The engines which "fire" them burn for only seconds�after that it is 
momentum that carries the rocket forward. For instance, on a forty-minute 
4,000-mile flight, an intercontinental ballistic missile is under power for 
only about 200 seconds. The speed it has gained while its engines were burning then 
carries it along on course until it eventually loses momentum and, like an artillery
shell, arches over and falls to the earth. The course followed by an 
artillery shell or by a rocket-propelled missile while it is in flight is called 
its "trajectory."