Question; If Space is a Vacuum then why do Rockets Work? Let me know!
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Rockets need thrust to get into space. It pushes against gravity with a force greater then gravity. If space is a vacuum, there is no opposite force for the thrust to push against. So, why do rockets and thrusters work in space? I've kind of always wondered. Thanks for watching! If you've enjoyed this video please feel free to share and leave a "like" so I have an idea of what to make! **This video is within the public domain and was created by NASA.
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actually it is just based on super calculations its like if you want to sent a ship to mars.. its first rotated around the earth to gain speed and then left into the space to reach that planet at proper angle.. and now it maintains that path untill it reaches the destination i hope u get it
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYrM0f-nP2U
In fact, they work even BETTER in space. Since it practically is a vacuum there is no wind resistance and no ambient pressure working against the gasses escaping from the engine nozzle. -
Here's the correct answer: It's impossible. The notion of an outer space is simply a lie. Everyone has been taught that it's real since birth. It's the reason you're getting so much flak for asking a simple question.
Space is a lie, doesn't exist. -
Every action has an equal and opposite reaction. Action = Thrust comes out the bottom of the rocket. Reaction = motion of the rocket.
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Only CGI Rockets work in "space"...no resistance = no force :D Air pressure is 14.7 PSI at sea level. That is ONE TONNE per square foot. That's a lot to cause resistance and therefore thrust.
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They DONT
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Newtons law, don't you people have an education, or read books.
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Almost everything we been told is a lie so there is no problem in simply asking this question.
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Newton's third law of motion.
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Well, try sitting on a desk chair and throw away something heavy, you should go into the opposite direction. Rockets use the same system but with water, which is produced when you burn hydrogen and oxygen, the fuels the space shuttle used
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imagine yourself on a space walk, and your rocket pack breaks down, you are 15 feat from you air lock but cant get back to it. Throw a wrench directly down a vector defined by your location relative to the air lock. The wrench will fly away, and you will start moving toward the air lock, and will be able to grab on. Newton's second law just saved your life, and no atmosphere was needed.
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if space is a vacuum than there is no matter for the thrust to push against. I don't see how relativity would work in a vacuum of space. how would u slow down. only if space is a fluid that would explain how thrusters could work. the science we are supposed to believe doesn't make sense
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ok R… Lets go with momentum… so once you propel a rocket high enough to get to "outer space" where does this non-vacuum weightlessness begin? what mile? 100 300 1000.? is the Earth's atmosphere finite? is there a definite line between it and the vacuum of space? do the astro-nots just pop into weightlessness in about an instant or is there some sort of gray area where they gradually lose weight as they get further away? hmm… what I really wonder most… where do the astro-nots in the space station take a shit 💩? I mean months and months of american, japanese and Russians don't mix well ya know. they must be launching their turds in escape pods… yup.. that's what I think about when I think of space… turds in evacuation pods!
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ok R… Lets go with momentum… so once you propel a rocket high enough to get to "outer space" where does this non-vacuum weightlessness begin? what mile? 100 300 1000.? is the Earth's atmosphere finite? is there a definite line between it and the vacuum of space? do the astro-nots just pop into weightlessness in about an instant or is there some sort of gray area where they gradually lose weight as they get further away? hmm… what I really wonder most… where do the astro-nots in the space station take a shit 💩? I mean months and months of american, japanese and Russians don't mix well ya know. they must be launching their turds in escape pods… yup.. that's what I think about when I think of space… turds in evacuation pods!
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To answer your question you need to stand on a skateboard and throw a 20kg weight. You won't move. Even in space the gas particles colliding to create an opposing force theory is absurd, they would simply bounce off each other and fly into the beyond in every direction instead of moving the man made craft. It's like trying to move 100 meters on a skateboard with two cans of lynx deodorant, literally no matter which way they are directed you still aren't going anywhere. Not a single person can give you an accurate answer to your question because there isn't one. I urge you all to look at the earth on live feed from 100,000 feet or above. The earth is far bigger then you have been told. Always continue to ask questions about what you are told is true.
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realising two gasses at different speeds each colliding at the other to give thrust.
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i just lost 20 QI points just for reading a few "anti-space-stuff" comments. How can people don't understand basic physics?
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Rockets flies at an angle and it can use its force while orbiting the earth then it will escape the gravity of the earth. Newton says that object in motion will keep moving for a long time until something affects it. So what does it means? When the rocket escapes the orbit of the earth, it will keep moving until the moon's gravity will affect it. Then the rocket again starts firing to control the direction itself. Flat earth confirmed. Welcome to the earth. That's only my understanding. I'm not good in grammar si sorry. That's all
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Suppose it works... where are the kerosene storage in those rockets? ohh yeah somewhere in the middle... mmm there is enough to end up in the ocean ;)
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Of course rockets work in space. All you have to do is watch a cartoon or sci-fi movie to know that. :)
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