Actually no, I'm saying that plugging simplistic numbers into Newton's second law to produce your expectations is naive. The separate notion that some "basic physics" law must always fully govern or constrain observable behavior is an academic disagreement.
Newton's 2nd Law IS SIMPLISTIC. You have to plug in a NET FORCE.
What are the actor applying forces on this AM?
1. Gravity, 1.62 down
2. Rocket Thrust, up
3. Undesirable "Fire in the Hole" exhaust compression? (which Apollo apparently has minimized, so should be nominal), Up.
4. {Got any other ideas?}
What other Force Actors am I missing? Please enumerate and provide a force amplitude range that you are proposing.
In the end, you sum the contributing forces to arrive at a Net Force, which then feeds into Newton's 2nd Law, to produce an estimated Acceleration/motion.
Do you agree? If not please, be specific with corrections.===
#2 and #3 (and #4?) - can have complex behavior to explain how these forces were generated... but in the end, Newton's Unbreakable (in this context) Law mandates that the resulting acceleration will directly correlate to the summed up Net Force.
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=== SELF-CORRECTION ================
And I just realized one mistake I've been stating regarding the thrust ratios... it's 2.5X NET FORCE difference (which includes Gravity) -- The actual Rocket Thrust ratio required would be less than 2.5X, as follows:
Predicted Rocket Thrust = 3.01 m/s^2
Gravity counters this with 1.62 m/s^2
Resulting in predicted Accel = 1.39 m/s^2
Thus for it to instead go 3.57 m/s^2
The Rocket Thrust must then provide 2.18 m/s^2 more thrust than the engine rating at steady state.
Thus the Rocket Thrust required to achieve the Observed motion is 1.724 X the rated engine thrust... not 2.57x.
So the issue to be solved here isn't as bad as I had been stating (which seems to have escaped everyone's notice here as well).
This is why I like "protagonists" in my research -- the scrutiny helps me to weed out my mistakes. (in this case, I had to find my own)
Revised statements are:15.6kN Rocket thrust rating, must produce 26.9kN instead, to achieve the observed Acceleration/Motion.
(Or, this force needs to come from some other acting force.)
The excess thrust being witnessed is 11.3 kN, or about 72% above the rated Rocket thrust.
I will correct my source KB doc, ASAP.