I also have a dumb rocket question. Much dumber than VQ's.
Exactly how efficient is a rocket engine in terms of total energy generated and actual pushing power to lift the rocket?
The way I understand it is probably best described in simplistic terms as follows:
We'll view a spherical combustion chamber as a vertical slice through the middle of a real one, a clock face. Put very simply, the following happens:
1. The fuel and oxidiser are burnt at the centre of the clock.
2. The burnt gases expand rapidly in four directions, to 3, 6, 9, and 12 o'clock, where they press against the sides and top of the chamber.
3. The pressures of the gases at 3 and 9 o'clock cancel each other out, so are, in fact, wasted.
4. There is little or no pressure at 6 o'clock because the gases continue out the chamber's exhaust nozzle, so are also wasted.
5. Finally, the gas pressure against the top of the chamber is the propulsive force which lifts the rocket. And that's why a rocket works in a vacuum. The gases don't push against the air when they come out of the nozzle, as some people think.
I realise that simplifications can be dangerous and am deliberately ignoring that the burnt gases expand in all directions mainly for the sake of other laypersons like myself.
So does this mean that, in this case, about 75% of the energy generated is wasted at 3, 6, and 9 o'clock?
Are the gases at 3, 9 and 12 o'clock next used in some way, or do they just bounce around and finally hurtle out the exhaust nozzle?
Does the shape of the chamber have any effect on the energy generated and how much is used and how much is wasted?