The oxygen is carried in tanks as a liquid, just as the fuel is.
Answer The Space Shuttle is a rocket. By definition, a Rocket is a vehicle that burns gas that it carries with it. Where as, a jet airplane burns the oxygen from the air and is not a rocket. The Rocket when it is launched has a liquid fuel rocket engines at the back end of it. It also has two long, solid fuel rocket engines that separate after launch. But the space shuttle is pulled by a rocket.
The oxygen in a rocket can come from either cryogenic liquid oxygen stored onboard the rocket, or from onboard solid rocket fuel that contains its own oxidizer, such as ammonium perchlorate. In both cases, the oxygen is used during the combustion process to react with the fuel and generate thrust.
An example of a motor that burns fuel without air is a solid fuel rocket motor. These motors contain both fuel and oxidizer within the fuel itself, allowing combustion to occur without the need for external air.
The rocket carries its own supply of oxygen with which to burn the fuel.
There are two ways to do that: -- The fuel that the rocket burns has its own oxygen combined with the other chemicals in the fuel. -- The rocket carries oxygen in a separate tank, and mixes it with the fuel in order for the fuel to burn.
Rockets carry their own oxidizer to burn their fuel in space, as there is no oxygen available in space for combustion. The fuel and oxidizer react together in the rocket engine to produce thrust, allowing the rocket to move forward. This allows rockets to function in the vacuum of space where there is no atmospheric oxygen.
It burns with oxygen. That's all.
Yes. If a rocket fires its rockets to manoeuvre, then it burns fuel. Fuel is defined as anything that burns; gases and solid propellent. In space, the fuel has to have oxygen added or an oxidizer to sustain the burn.
That's a very important question. To be very technical, the rocket motor burns without "air" ... outside the atmosphere ... because it takes its own oxygen along with it. There's always a chemical called an "oxidizer" somewhere in the rocket, either mixed into the fuel, or else in a separate tank.
In a solid rocket engine, the oxidizer is a chemical component that provides the necessary oxygen for combustion of the fuel. Common oxidizers used include ammonium perchlorate or ammonium nitrate, which are mixed with a fuel to create a propellant that burns to produce thrust. The oxidizer is integral to the solid propellant formulation, enabling the rocket to operate in the absence of atmospheric oxygen.
How much fuel will be needed in a rocket will depend on the size of the rocket and where it is going. A rocket that will be traveling into space burns a lot of fuel and will need enough to keep it in orbit for teh desired time.
Oxygen