"We put fuel in a rocket, blow it up in a remote location, and measure how big the boom is."
See full article...
See full article...
So say we all.NASA wants to know how the launch industry's chic new rocket fuel explodes
Did SpaceX provide access to the data? Or did they allow NASA to copy it, use it in their models, and share it with other interested parties? If it's not the latter, NASA doesn't have the data. Part of their mission is providing datasets to others so that one doesn't have to repeat their own experiments.Why does NASA say they don't have the data, when SpaceX provides it in massive excess?
You word order wrongMethane is better suited for reusable engines because they leave less behind sooty residue than kerosene
Why do you inherently trust what SpaceX says? I'd rather NASA or other outside agency conduct their own tests to be sure.Why does NASA say they don't have the data, when SpaceX provides it in massive excess?
I'd guess that the shape of the pole will offer no significant reduction in the blast effect once around the pole. Dynamically, air is very much like water. So a shock wave in the air will react like water. A blast wave is a wave, and will rejoin itself if interrupted, even though it's traveling at Mach speed.In the picture, I notice that they have a shrapnel barrier set up in-line with the ranged blast discs. While this makes sense from a "let's not shred the discs instead of measuring percussive force" perspective, won't that barrier also affect the wash from the explosion? I would have expected all the range discs to be distributed such that each has a clear path from the explosion site.
(Use 'The Liberty Bell March' as the music track.)I hope they release a video reel of all the test booms.
I agree that NASA needs to do their own carefully controlled and rigorously instrumented testing, but I was under the impression that, while SpaceX has a lot of data, by far most of it came from decidedly uncontrolled events, unplanned, and mostly useless for a quantitative analysis like this needs to be.Why do you inherently trust what SpaceX says? I'd rather NASA or other outside agency conduct their own tests to be sure.
It's not really different from when SpaceX starting landing F9s at the pad. I worked in the industrial area at CCSFS for a decade; the first handful of pad landings required full evacuation of that entire area, but after they proved success then it stopped being so broad. I see no reason to expect a different outcome here.
Signs that it's been a long week: My brain saw "White House Test Facility" at first glance.I’m surprised they’re not doing this at White Sands Test Facility (the NASA facility, not the missile range on the other side of the Organ Mountains). They did a bunch of drop tests of large LH2/LOX there - there’s pictures various places.
OTOH, Eglin is where they test Fuel Air Bombs, and perhaps the MOAB, and it’s currently active. WSTF probably hasn’t done drop/explosion tests for 40-50 years.
No one grades their own homework, even if they're the best student in the class. Or to be less paternalistic, for the same reason papers get peer-review. SpaceX might be providing excellent data, but when that data is uncorroborated by sources with different incentive structures, it probably shouldn't be taken as gospel. FWIW, I'm sure SpaceX cares a lot about this and has already spent a lot of resources on getting actionable data because they don't want to destroy their own facilities and people. Glad to see NASA spending money to answer this thoroughly.Why does NASA say they don't have the data, when SpaceX provides it in massive excess?
As I understand it, they WERE doing some methalox tests when I was at White Sands last year (for something completely unrelated). Or was it the year before? Anyway, the explosion that rattled the conference room we were in startled the dickens out of me but the folks who work there just carried on like it was any other random Tuesday.I’m surprised they’re not doing this at White Sands Test Facility (the NASA facility, not the missile range on the other side of the Organ Mountains). They did a bunch of drop tests of large LH2/LOX there - there’s pictures various places.
The US Space Force and NASA, the agencies responsible for range safety at America’s federally owned spaceports
Possibly an ammonium nitrate explosion in a ship many decades ago? One of the more terrific industrial accidents.shall we cue up the opportunity for "largest peacetime explosion" ?
(I have a family member who lives in halifax who periodically walks past one of the anchors from the halifax harbour explosion that was deposited miles away from the harbour)
What's "BDA", in context here?“We just don’t have the analysis on those to be able to say, ‘Hey, from a testing perspective, how small can we reduce the BDA and be safe?'” said Col. Brian Chatman
“We put fuel in a rocket, blow it up in a remote location, and measure how big the boom is,”
Nonsense. If NASA (or, more likely, Los Alamos) had run these tests before, nobody would be repeating them. Everyone (government and industry) would simply take NASA's data at face value.No one grades their own homework, even if they're the best student in the class. Or to be less paternalistic, for the same reason papers get peer-review. SpaceX might be providing excellent data, but when that data is uncorroborated by sources with different incentive structures, it probably shouldn't be taken as gospel. FWIW, I'm sure SpaceX cares a lot about this and has already spent a lot of resources on getting actionable data because they don't want to destroy their own facilities and people. Glad to see NASA spending money to answer this thoroughly.
he concept is simple. “We put fuel in a rocket, blow it up in a remote location, and measure how big the boom is,” said Jason Hopper, deputy manager for the methalox assessment project at NASA’s Stennis Space Center.
RP-2 has entered the chatMethane is better suited for reusable engines because they leave less behind sooty residue than kerosene, which SpaceX uses on the Falcon 9 rocket.
Nit:
Range Safety has been a USAF, now USSF, responsibility for decades. I don't think that's changed, someone more recently there can pipe in.
I bring this up because, if the above still holds, USSF is telling NASA how it's gonna work. Indeed, for operations at the Cape (separate place from KSC), USSF will set the requirements.
Agreed. To reword an oft quoted axiom: Verify before you trust. It's a rewording I find more practically useful. You're not really trusting anything if you need to verify the work anyway.Why do you inherently trust what SpaceX says? I'd rather NASA or other outside agency conduct their own tests to be sure.
It's not really different from when SpaceX starting landing F9s at the pad. I worked in the industrial area at CCSFS for a decade; the first handful of pad landings required full evacuation of that entire area, but after they proved success then it stopped being so broad. I see no reason to expect a different outcome here.