No if it's a single-stage rocket, yes if it's a 2- or multi-stage rocket.
In the first few minutes of launch, big hunks of frost fall off. Later, when the rocket is near the top of the atmosphere, the large first stage of the rocket motor detaches by its explosive mounting bolts blowing themselves to bits. Later, the intermediate stage detaches in a similar manner.
It depends upon the design of the rocket- different rockets have different numbers of stages (parts)
rocket airport
a rocket ship is sort of shaped like a bullet with 3 different parts the botom 2 fall off
Usually nothing deliberately falls off a rocket right at liftoff. However most rockets are attached to the launchpad by metal tie down brackets, when the engines have reached full power explosive bolts separate the rocket from these brackets allowing it to leave the launchpad. Multistage rockets allow expended boosters and/or stages to fall off, but this does not happen at liftoff, it typically happens several minutes after liftoff.
poke-gravity
In the first few minutes of launch, big hunks of frost fall off. Later, when the rocket is near the top of the atmosphere, the large first stage of the rocket motor detaches by its explosive mounting bolts blowing themselves to bits. Later, the intermediate stage detaches in a similar manner.
It depends upon the design of the rocket- different rockets have different numbers of stages (parts)
rocket airport
The single-stage rocket can get the payload off earth, but not into space, because there is not enough fuel, and the weight eventually becomes too great. So at some point, the rocket will fall back down to earth. For this reason, most single-stage rockets are missiles.
a rocket ship is sort of shaped like a bullet with 3 different parts the botom 2 fall off
Yes. There's Rocket Blast Off and Rocket Re-Entry.
Usually nothing deliberately falls off a rocket right at liftoff. However most rockets are attached to the launchpad by metal tie down brackets, when the engines have reached full power explosive bolts separate the rocket from these brackets allowing it to leave the launchpad. Multistage rockets allow expended boosters and/or stages to fall off, but this does not happen at liftoff, it typically happens several minutes after liftoff.
To launch the rocket off the ground and make it go fast.
The first thing that decreases when the rocket takes off the ground is the hybrid fuel in the large tanks attached with it. As it takes off and approaches to the outer atmospheric line the tanks attached are detached and then the boosters come off from the rockets. Thus it decreases the number of accessory parts after the take off.
It Starts up and then it take off as a usually rockets will do
Italy did not use rocket missile or rocket-powered aircraft in World War II. They may well have fired off mortar shells which were and are essentially rockets- but so did most of the combatants. Italy had some neat submarines, but not rockets.