There are two forces acting on a water rocket. The thrust which the force that is given to the water rocket to make it move, and the other one is the gravity.
Yes we can use limit state design for water tank design....
I have this assignment as well, it don't take a rocket scientist to figure this out
Check out this article on Water-Rockets.com that describes a simple soda-bottle rocket with parachute recovery system: http://www.water-rockets.com/article.pl?101 The article include photos and a video showing the rocket in action. Good luck!
75 psi range
rocket ship to be more precise Saturn V rocket, the biggest rocket in the world
to simplify the design of the rocket.
a rocket powered by water
it will become an air powered rocket
don't forget the heisenberg compensators
No. They engineer them and design them
The angle of the rocket. The amount of water in the rocket.
the rocket is pushing water downwards which means that the water pushes the rocket upwards very hard that it can overcome gravity and fly.
If you have leaks in a water bottle rocket, the pressure will quickly escape along with the water and the rocket won't be able to reach as high an altitude as a rocket without leaks.
There are two forces acting on a water rocket. The thrust which the force that is given to the water rocket to make it move, and the other one is the gravity.
Water rockets need fins because the rocket needs to stay in balance....without fins on a water rocket, the water rocket would be going out of control because it is not in balance!
A water rocket should probably have three to four fins.