A satellite couldn't go to Jupiter since satellites are objects,natural or manmade, that are in orbit around other celestial objects such as planets and stars. If you mean how much fuel would a spacecraft/spaceship need to go to Jupiter, that would depend on the mass of the spacecraft and the acceleration.
For example, if you pushed your spaceship to fifty thousand miles per hour, it would continue at that speed without any more fuel being used because space is a nearly total vacuum and offers almost no resistance to an object passing through it. If you wanted to keep speeding up on the way, it would take a lot of fuel.
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.
The Saturn V rocket used for the Apollo 13 mission required approximately 2.5 million liters (660,000 gallons) of fuel. This fuel consisted of liquid oxygen (LOX) as the oxidizer and refined kerosene (RP-1) as the fuel.
It depends upon the weight of the total vehicle and the payload combined (including the fuel, which needs to be carried upward too). For more information, see the link below the ads. The Saturn V can carry 385.6 tonnes of propellant according to pg 244 in "The Rocket: The History and Development of Rocket & Missile Technology"
It depends on the weight of the rocket and payload. The Saturn 5 that carried the Apollo moon missions into space carried 5.5 million pounds (2.5 million kilograms) of fuel. Most of the fuel is used to lift the fuel.
I don"t know about the space shuttles but the fuel consumption of the Saturn V"s used in the manned Moon shots was humungous- bear in mind this is various types of rocket fuel, not anything you would find at a service station, but in the initial stage burns the Saturn V consumed- l6 tons of rocket fuel a second! that"s an average fully loaded Truck of the Mack type- 32,000 lbs, in one second!
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.
The Saturn V rocket used for the Apollo 13 mission required approximately 2.5 million liters (660,000 gallons) of fuel. This fuel consisted of liquid oxygen (LOX) as the oxidizer and refined kerosene (RP-1) as the fuel.
It depends upon the weight of the total vehicle and the payload combined (including the fuel, which needs to be carried upward too). For more information, see the link below the ads. The Saturn V can carry 385.6 tonnes of propellant according to pg 244 in "The Rocket: The History and Development of Rocket & Missile Technology"
It depends on the weight of the rocket and payload. The Saturn 5 that carried the Apollo moon missions into space carried 5.5 million pounds (2.5 million kilograms) of fuel. Most of the fuel is used to lift the fuel.
I don"t know about the space shuttles but the fuel consumption of the Saturn V"s used in the manned Moon shots was humungous- bear in mind this is various types of rocket fuel, not anything you would find at a service station, but in the initial stage burns the Saturn V consumed- l6 tons of rocket fuel a second! that"s an average fully loaded Truck of the Mack type- 32,000 lbs, in one second!
5 Million Newtons was the pressure exerted by Saturn v rocket
The amount of fuel a rocket burns during liftoff depends on the specific rocket and mission. On average, a rocket like the Falcon 9 may burn around 400,000 to 700,000 gallons of fuel during liftoff. The Saturn V rocket used for the Apollo missions burned approximately 20 tons of fuel per minute during liftoff.
The amount of fuel a rocket carries can vary greatly depending on its size, purpose, and destination. For example, the Saturn V rocket used in the Apollo program carried over 3 million kilograms of fuel. Today's Falcon 9 rocket from SpaceX typically carries around 400,000 kilograms of fuel.
The amount of fuel in a rocket ship's fuel tank varies significantly depending on the type and size of the rocket. For example, the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carries about 1,000,000 pounds of propellant, while the Saturn V, used during the Apollo missions, held approximately 12 million pounds of fuel. The specific fuel capacity is designed based on the mission requirements, payload, and intended orbit.
The space shuttle is not capable of leaving low earth orbit, a rocket like what the Apollo missions used (although much bigger) would be required.
The amount of fuel needed to fuel a rocket depends on various factors, including the rocket's size, weight, design, and mission profile. For example, a small satellite launch vehicle may require a few tons of fuel, while a larger rocket like the Saturn V used for Apollo missions required about 3,000 tons of fuel. The fuel mass is calculated based on the rocket equation, which considers the desired delta-v (change in velocity) for the mission. Ultimately, precise calculations are essential for mission success and efficiency.
At the very bottom is the nozzle, after that is the fuel. Depending on how big the rocket is and how much fuel it needs determines the size of the chamber