In my short career as a model rocket launcher we did this. There was a tall pole near our launcher. I called the company that installed the pole and they told me it 73 feet tall.
Someone, usually my younger brother, would be located much farther away from the launch site. After each launch, his job was to estimate how high (or how many of those poles he thought) the rocket flew before falling back down.
Answer:Simple geometry is needed - after all you are using a rocket and must have some math and science skills. An observer at a distance follows the flight of a rocket along a moveable bar. The angle of the bar at the top of the trajectory and the distance of the observer from the launch pad is converted into altitude by the formula:
cot A =adjacent/opposite
where A id the observed angle fromthe horizontal, the adjacent is the distance to the pad from the observer, and opposite the height of the rocket.
All that's needed is to reorganize the equation and finf the cotangent of the angle:
Opposite = adjacent/cot A
How long is a bit of string? and how deep is space? there is no real answer.
Depends on many things....
How you make the rocket
What engine you use
what propulsion.
Tell me what you will use and I'll try to answer it for you.
The answer depends on the design of the rocket, how it is propelled and so on.
I would say, when it stops ascending.
Some of mine go over 5,000 feet.
Any where from 0- maybe even 300 feet
121,000 ft
A rocket (firework) achieves maximum height once the fuel plus upward thrust runs out. Then gravity takes over and the rocket falls back to the ground.
The rocket would attain a maximum height of 158.65 feet (63.65 feet from the top of the structure).
when the vertical component of its velocity is zero.
check your undies and then you'll know ;) PEEK A BOO
Apogee
about one-forth of the height of the size of the rocket.
Fins on a rocket affects its flight by the way they are built on the rocket
Well, for what? If it's height, then 90o. If you want maximum horizontal distance, then fire it at 45o.
Lift, drag, thrust, and gravity.
the rockets on the fin are over 50 feet long and this so the rocket will be stable during flight
A plane needs air, a rocket doesn't.
A model rocket reaches maximum velocity at the point where the thrust from the engine matches the drag from the air, or the point where the thrust goes to zero when the fuel burns out, whichever comes first.