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Definition: rocket from The Penguin Dictionary of Science

A system of propulsion used for weapons and spacecraft. A rocket carries both fuel and oxidant (as opposed to a missile, which may be powered by a conventional ➤jet engine) and is therefore suitable for use outside the Earth's atmosphere. Chemical reaction between the fuel and oxidant forces a stream of gas out of a nozzle at high velocity, and the law of ➤conservation of momentum means that the momentum of the rocket increases in the opposite direction.


rocket, in aeronautics

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
any vehicle propelled by ejection of the gases produced by combustion of self-contained propellants. Rockets are used in fireworks, as military weapons, and in scientific applications such as space exploration. The force acting on a rocket, called its thrust, is equal to the mass ejected per second times the velocity of the expelled gases. This force can be understood in terms of Newton's third law of motion, which states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. In the case of a rocket, the action is the backward-streaming flow of gas and the reaction is the forward motion of the rocket. Another way of understanding rocket propulsion is to realize that tremendous pressure is exerted on the walls of the combustion chamber except where the gas exits at the rear; the resulting unbalanced force on the front interior wall of the chamber pushes the rocket forward. A common misconception, before space exploration pointed up its obvious fallacy, holds that a rocket…
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Full text Article rocket

From Philip's Encyclopedia
The space shuttle has three main components when...
Slender, tapering missile or vehicle powered by a rocket engine . Most of its volume contains fuel; the remainder is the payload (such as an explosive, scientific instruments, or a spacecraft). Chemical rocket engines are powered by solid or liquid propellants that are burned in a combustion chamber…
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Full text Article rocket

From Word Origins
English has two words rocket . The older, and now less familiar, is the name of a plant of the cabbage family whose leaves are used in salads. It was inspired by the plant's downy stems, for it goes back ultimately to Latin ērūca , which originally meant ‘hairy caterpillar’. This may have been…
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Full text Article rocket

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
Projectile driven by the reaction of gases produced by a fast-burning fuel. Unlike jet engines, which are also reaction engines, rockets carry their own oxygen supply to burn their fuel and do not require any surrounding atmosphere. For warfare, rocket heads carry an explosive device. Rockets have…
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Full text Article ROCKET

From Gaither's Dictionary of Scientific Quotations
English science and science fiction writer We do not have to wait until someone produces “anti-gravity” before we can travel to the planets: the means is already at hand. It is the rocket. The Exploration of Space Chapter 2 (p. 16 ) Harper & Brothers Publishers. New York New York USA . 1951. The…
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Full text Article rocket

From Science Encyclopedia: Encyclopedia of Space and Astronomy
Source: Infobase Learning.
In general, a completely self-contained projectile, pyrotechnic device, or flying vehicle propelled by a reaction (rocket) engine. Since it carries all of its propellant, a rocket vehicle can function in the vacuum of outer space and represents the key to space travel. Rockets obey Sir Isaac…
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Full text Article rocket

From The Oxford Companion to Food
rocket
Eruca sativa , a salad plant which grows wild in Asia and the Mediterranean region and is most popular in Italy. The name is clearly a loan from the French roquette . The plant has been introduced elsewhere, including N. America where it arrived with Italian immigrants—hence its standard US name, …
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Liquid rocket engine schematic. The...
1. Introduction to Rocket Propulsion Systems 2. Fundamental Principles of Chemical Rocket Propulsion 3. Rocket Propellants 4. Rocket Engine Cycles Glossary bipropellant Propellant system consisting of both an oxidizer and a fuel. characteristic exhaust velocity A reference term relating achievable…
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Full text Article GHOST ROCKETS

From Cultural Studies: The UFO Encyclopedia
Ludvig Lindbäck, brother to principal witness...
At 11 p.m . on January 18, 1946, as an American C-54 transport plane was passing over rural France at 7,000 feet, the pilot observed what he took to be a brilliant meteor at 35 degrees above the eastern horizon. The object fell and was lost to view—but only momentarily. To the witness’ astonishment…
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Dr. Robert Goddard (far right and inset) after a...
Rockets are the only way humans have been able to launch objects from Earth into space so far. A rocket is a vehicle system that carries all of its own propellant. The propellant is accelerated to a high speed—usually by combustion, converting it into gas and heating it up—and pushed out the back of…
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Full text Article Atlas rocket

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
US rocket, originally designed and built in 1946 as an intercontinental missile for the US Air Force but subsequently adapted for space use. Each Atlas originally cost US$3 million to build. NASA engineers called the rocket a ‘gasbag’ because its thin stainless steel sections had to be pressurized…
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