do you about the history or rocket????
THE ROCKET
- FROM EAST TO WEST
C A
simple analogy can help us to understand how a rocket operates. It is much like
a machine gun mounted on the rear of a boat. In reaction to the backward
discharge of bullets, the gun, and hence the boat, move forwards. A rocket
motor’s ‘bullets’ are minute, high-speed particles produced by burning
propellants in a suitable chamber. The reaction to the ejection of these small
particles causes the rocket to move forwards. There is evidence that the
reaction principle was applied practically well before the rocket was invented .
In his Noctes Atticae or Greek Nights , Aulus Gellius describes ‘ the pigeon of
Archytas’, an invention dating back to about 360 BC. Cylindrical in shape , made
of wood, and hanging from string, it was moved to and fro by steam blowing out
from small exhaust ports at either end. The reaction to the discharging steam
provided the bird with motive power.
D The invention of rockets is linked
inextricably with the invention of ‘black powder’. Most historians of
technology credit the Chinese with its discovery. They base their belief on
studies of Chinese writings or on the notebooks of early Europeans who settled
in or made long visits to China to study its history and civilisation. It is
probable that, some time in the tenth century, black powder was first
compounded from its basic ingredients of saltpetre, charcoal and sulphur. But
this does not mean that it was immediately used to propel rockets. By the
thirteenth century, powder propelled fire arrows had become rather common. The
Chinese relied on this type of technological development to produce incendiary
projectiles of many sorts, explosive grenades and possibly cannons to repel
their enemies. One such weapon was the ‘basket of fire’ or, as directly
translated from Chinese, the ‘arrows like flying leopards’. The 0.7 metre-long
arrows, each with a long tube of gunpowder attached near the point of each
arrow, could be fired from a long, octagonal-shaped basket at the same time and
had a range of 400 paces. Another weapon was the ‘ arrow as a flying sabre’,
which could be fired from crossbows. The rocket, placed in a similar position
to other rocket-propelled arrows, was designed to increase the range. A small
iron weight was attached to the 1.5m bamboo shaft, just below the feathers, to
increase the arrow’s stability by moving the centre of gravity to a position
below the rocket. At a similar time, the Arabs had developed the ‘egg which
moves and burns’. This ‘egg’ was apparently full of gunpowder and stabilised by
a 1.5m tail. It was fired using two rockets attached to either side of this
tail.
E It was not until the eighteenth century that
Europe became seriously interested in the possibilities of using the rocket
itself as a weapon of war and not just to propel other weapons. Prior to this,
rockets were used only in pyrotechnic displays. The incentive for the more
aggressive use of rockets came not from within the European continent but from
far-away India, whose leaders had built up a corps of rocketeers and used
rockets successfully against the British in the late eighteenth century. The
Indian rockets used against the British were described by a British Captain serving
in India as ‘an iron envelope about 200 millimetres long and 40 millimetres in
diameter with sharp points at the top and a 3m-long bamboo guiding stick’. In
the early nineteenth century the British began to experiment with incendiary
barrage rockets. The British rocket differed from the Indian version in that it
was completely encased in a stout, iron cylinder, terminating in a conical
head, measuring one metre in diameter and having a stick almost five metres
long and constructed in such a way that it could be firmly attached to the body
of the rocket. The Americans developed a rocket, complete with its own
launcher, to use against the Mexicans in the mid-nineteenth century. A long
cylindrical tube was propped up by two sticks and fastened to the top of the
launcher, thereby allowing the rockets to be inserted and lit from the other end. However, the results were sometimes not that
impressive as the behaviour of the rockets in flight was less than
predictable.
F Since then, there have been huge developments
in rocket technology, often with devastating results in the forum of war.
Nevertheless, the modern day space programs owe their success to the humble
beginnings of those in previous centuries who developed the foundations of the
reaction principle. Who knows what it will be like in the future ?
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