Author Topic: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast  (Read 10569 times)

Offline JayUtah

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #135 on: December 04, 2024, 12:53:00 AM »
My "limited understanding" says "the AM's acceleration can be used to determine the NET FORCE acting on it".   Do you really disagree with this?

I disagree with your dismissal of other sources of net force that do not conform to your understanding. We discussed this.

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OK, so the fluid will expand, likely into gas form.

No. Liquid plays no part in this estimation. It's a rookie mistake to confused the terms liquid, gas, and fluid.

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Quickly it should reach steady state.

Correct, but unfortunately the geometry of the problem will change either before or after this occurs. You have to determine which provides the most accurate estimate.

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Starting out, portions of this fuel will be expelled from the nozzle before it's burned.

Not especially relevant. For now we're interested in combustion products, which are gases: compressible fluids.

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Transient behaviors can vary, as it reaches steady state.  Pressure against the front of the ignition chamber as well as the exhaust cone, is known as "Pressure Thrust"

No. Pressure against the front of the thrust chamber is not at all related to pressure thrust. Pressure thrust is purely a function of the difference between static pressure at the exit plane and static pressure of the ambient, and the area of the exit plane. Exit-plane pressure is related to thrust chamber pressure by the expansion ratio.

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The Momentum Thrust is calculated by "fuel flow rate * exhaust velocity"..

Not relevant to this aspect of estimation.

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So what's next?

Seems like we are still in the process of unraveling your befuddled understanding of how rockets work.
"Facts are stubborn things." --John Adams

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #136 on: December 04, 2024, 01:15:56 AM »
....
This is the most inefficient method of working together.  You ask questions, then get pedantic about terms I use.  Your goal here doesn't seem to be "teaching" but to try and establish yourself as "the authority" while you point to "rookie mistakes" in my terminology to discredit me.  This is your game plan, so not playing it.

This MLH claim has stood for 40 years, and there is still no mathematically supported theory to explain how this acceleration happened at Launch.

So as it stands, even the "renown Apollo experts" are unaware of such a proof.   I'll document it as such.

If/when you or someone else shows me such a proof, I'll incorporate it into my document to maintain it's targeted integrity.

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #137 on: December 04, 2024, 01:16:58 AM »
end-of-thread, unless you want to show us a proof, then I'll assess what you have to show.

Offline JayUtah

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #138 on: December 04, 2024, 01:20:50 AM »
This is the most inefficient method of working together.  You ask questions, then get pedantic about terms I use.

I am correcting your errors as we go. You are not entitled to a presumption that you know what you are talking about.

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This is your game plan, so not playing it.

My game plan requires you to understand the questions you are asking. You want to jump over the part where you ask coherent questions and land on the part where a simplistic answer is spoon-fed to you, whereupon you summarily reject it and impose a new improper burden of proof. My game plan requires your acquiescence from Step One onward, so that when we reach the end you can't say, "Yeah, but..." Therefore it's now clear what your game plan is. No different than your game plan in all the other threads.

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So as it stands, even the "renown Apollo experts" are unaware of such a proof.   I'll document it as such.

"You won't overlook my ignorance, therefore I win."
« Last Edit: December 04, 2024, 01:57:44 AM by JayUtah »
"Facts are stubborn things." --John Adams

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #139 on: December 04, 2024, 05:10:10 AM »
I made a claim that "all other references I could find tend to say that Thrust at Launch is LOWER due to the exhaust being constrained, when the pressure outside builds up.   This would be similar to the AM trying to launch when almost sealed to the Lander base, which constricts exhaust outflow...  I have seen no references that talk about Thrust being MORE at Launch as a result of these types of Exhaust restrictions.

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Ref #1: https://www.grc.nasa.gov/www/k-12/rocket/TRCRocket/rocket_principles.html#:~:text=With%20rockets%2C%20the%20action%20is,the%20rocket%20to%20change%20direction.

"As a result rockets actually work better in space than they do in air. As the exhaust gas leaves the rocket engine it must push away the surrounding air; this uses up some of the energy of the rocket. In space, the exhaust gases can escape freely."
(implies that when the gases CANNOT escape freely, thrust is reduced)

Ref #2: Simple question of Google AI: "does a rocket produce more thrust when close to the ground?"
Answer is: "No, a rocket actually produces less thrust when close to the ground compared to when it is higher in the atmosphere or in space because the surrounding air impedes the exhaust gases from escaping freely, reducing the overall thrust generated by the engine"

Ref #3: https://www.uu.edu/dept/physics/scienceguys/2002Sept.cfm#:~:text=This%20thrust%20depends%20upon%20the,space%20than%20here%20on%20Earth.
Answer: This thrust depends upon the speed of the exhaust gases and the mass of gas being expelled each second, sometimes called the burn rate in pounds of fuel per second. On Earth, air tends to inhibit the exhaust gases getting out of the engine. This reduces the thrust.

Ref #4: https://www.grc.nasa.gov/www/K-12/rocket/Lessons/densityN_ans.html#:~:text=Unlike%20a%20jet%20engine%2C%20the,a%20pressure%20times%20area%20correction.
Answer: "the thrust generated by a rocket engine actually increases with altitude because the gas density decreases and there is less "back pressure" on the nozzle."


This was 4 for 4...  took me a few minutes.   I didn't provide these references because I thought this was COMMON KNOWLEDGE, especially for someone with unassailable knowledge like you.

I'm not saying these are "definitive"... but as I said earlier, this is what the "available references all seemed to indicate -- that rocket thrust is LESS when the exhaust is constrained.

But in my analysis of the AM launch - I did NOT apply this concept.  I kept it the SAME, 15600 Newtons starting immediately at ignition.  It was you who seem to think that we're going to be able to find a way to prove that other factors could have contributed 72% more boost for a full 1 second.  Despite no one else seeming to be able to do this in the last 40 years.

Good luck, I'll be rooting for you -- to do what no other Apollogist has been able to do yet.... (that we know of)

Offline Miss Vocalcord

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #140 on: December 04, 2024, 05:14:10 AM »
But in my analysis of the AM launch - I did NOT apply this concept.  I kept it the SAME, 15600 Newtons starting immediately at ignition.  It was you who seem to think that we're going to be able to find a way to prove that other factors could have contributed 72% more boost for a full 1 second.  Despite no one else seeming to be able to do this in the last 40 years.
Can you show the math you used, it was simple high school physics you said, I can't find it anywhere in your documents; only some numbers.  I'm bad at physics.

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #141 on: December 04, 2024, 05:22:59 AM »
Can you show the math you used, it was simple high school physics you said, I can't find it anywhere in your documents; only some numbers.  I'm bad at physics.
Sure, it's in this spreadsheet, that is linked from the main doc.  Also the main doc links the folder where I have the Frame Caps, and KRITA projects and MP4's.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1qYtfrOghTwQ-C3sxMIerEGokdxFqFdM32_NX-TmpELs/edit?usp=drive_link

Offline JayUtah

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #142 on: December 04, 2024, 11:10:06 AM »
I made a claim that "all other references I could find tend to say that Thrust at Launch...

Your references all describe rockets firing in air, not at launch. Granted almost all rockets we build and care about today launch from Earth and fly in air initially. But the LM files entirely in a vacuum, where your references do not generally apply. The LM launch is in vacuum.

Further, your references are concerned with momentum thrust only, which is appropriate when discussing rockets that fly in air. We tune the expansion ratio to optimize momentum thrust for some particular altitude. For most rockets, that's launch altitude. But for others like the space shuttle, that's at a point higher in its trajectory. In vacuum, pressure thrust occurs and is much more pronounced. It provides a significant amount of the thrust in a vacuum, where a properly expanded plume (and therefore optimum momentum thrust) is practically impossible. Because the plume spreads in a vacuum, it's not always the case that an advantage in momentum thrust due to to unimpeded flow outpaces the loss of momentum thrust from incoherent flow. It depends on the precise design of the engine.

Just because your sources ignore this for the sake of simplicity doesn't mean they don't occur.

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This would be similar to the AM trying to launch when almost sealed to the Lander base, which constricts exhaust outflow.

That's not an unreasonable supposition, but then you neglect the augmentation to pressure thrust that occurs. Your references do not equip you to reason about this special problem in rocketry because they are basic explanations offered to a lay audience.

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I have seen no references that talk about Thrust being MORE at Launch as a result of these types of Exhaust restrictions.

Asked and answered. It's a condition we eminently tried to avoid, and so no one studied it. It has only become a subject of research lately now that hot staging is becoming possible. NASA was not interested in the thrust effects at LM launch. It was only interested in whether doing so would be dangerous. This is not to say they didn't contemplate the problem. The reference I provided allowed for a 50% overpressure at ignition.

My references have been technical papers written for a technical audience. Your references are pedagogical summaries written for lay persons. They will necessary simply the problem. I should also note that it's disingenuous of you to cite Google AI as a source when you categorically rejected others using it.

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I didn't provide these references because I thought this was COMMON KNOWLEDGE, especially for someone with unassailable knowledge like you.

Nice try. Someone who knows this material better than you disputed your understanding of it and the claims you have made regarding it. Now that you finally presented the references you claim you were relying upon, that person can tell you how you were misunderstanding it and misapplying it to your claims. Knowledge is not measured by whether someone agrees with you, and the world is not required to submit to your simplistic understanding. You're still craving that simple, pat answer and easily-digested pat sources.

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But in my analysis of the AM launch - I did NOT apply this concept.  I kept it the SAME, 15600 Newtons starting immediately at ignition.

And your expectation is wrong for that reason. I have endeavored without success to expand your understanding of how rockets produce thrust under various conditions—nominal and exceptional.
"Facts are stubborn things." --John Adams

Offline beedarko

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #143 on: December 04, 2024, 11:31:56 AM »
For example, the rigid/jerky/snapstop motion of the Apollo 11 AM before rendezvous - is extremely unrealistic, and I'd say impossible.

Wait. 

Did you actually think you were watching that rendezvous sequence at the original frame rate?

Offline Mag40

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #144 on: December 04, 2024, 12:46:18 PM »
Old Lunar Launch thread:
https://apollohoax.net/forum/index.php?topic=2015.0

And considerations that are never addressed.

Lunar liftoff Apollo 16 - pay attention to the camera view:



Footage, zoomed in, unbroken showing astronauts walking around the LM:


AT 3:10:00 Showing lunar activity prior to ingress, unbroken until launch. The footage is continuous despite youtube commentary frames.

Apollo 17 has the same thing only zoomed out and irrefutable, where Schmitt throws his geology hammer:



Then the lunar liftoff - identical background and unbroken transmission again:



I will state this categorically. If anyone looks at the footage before and during launch and says they aren't the same, they are lying. If anyone thinks NASA had the capability to manufacture fake activity around the LM they are delusional.
Requoting this - najak did the HB-two-step and claimed it was faked somehow because Star Wars was made 5yrs later.

I say again, anyone who looks at that and simply tries to claim it is faked is delusional. When you watch this on a large screen, such as a smart TV, you can see Schmitt throwing his hammer and it glints in the sky a short while after. So yes. I am saying that in 1972 nobody could manufacture an absolutely identical set with humans on that then, in continuous footage magically became the "lunar launch set".

Soon after launch, the camera pans around a little:

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #145 on: December 04, 2024, 03:41:50 PM »
Did you actually think you were watching that rendezvous sequence at the original frame rate?
29.97 FPS was the Camera spec, and also preserved in these AM Launches.  Then I compared the A17 Launch Audio Recording to align the "Ignition" vs. "Pitch over" statements - so see that the time scale between audio and video were the same....  giving an independent source for "timing validation".

For the entire launch from Ignition to Pitch-over, we can see a consistent 30 FPS for that 9 seconds (270 frames) where some form of motion happens within every single frame.

So yes, we have good reason to believe that those who transferred this to the video we see today did so "reliably" and correctly maintaining the original timing.

Thanks for your challenge.

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #146 on: December 04, 2024, 03:57:47 PM »
I say again, anyone who looks at that and simply tries to claim it is faked is delusional. When you watch this on a large screen, such as a smart TV, you can see Schmitt throwing his hammer and it glints in the sky a short while after. So yes. I am saying that in 1972 nobody could manufacture an absolutely identical set with humans on that then, in continuous footage magically became the "lunar launch set".
You are free to make this claim.

Likewise, I'm saying that:
"The AM Launch footages show motions that occurs at ~2.5X the engine's rated acceleration, requiring an added steady ~70% boost for a full 1 second.  And that as of yet, over the last 40 years, no one seems to have EVER given a viable mathematical explanation for this inordinately high acceleration."

My statement stands true.  Does anyone challenge my statement?  If not, my conclusions are complete.

If JayUTAH wants to become the FIRST to do what no others before have done - then have at it.  Do your best.  I'll reassess my statement after he makes his First-Ever presentation.

Offline JayUtah

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #147 on: December 04, 2024, 03:59:05 PM »
29.97 FPS was the Camera spec...

No.

You were asked about the rendezvous footage that you say is impossibly jerky. The rendezvous footage was captured on the Maurer 16 mm film camera at 6 fps. Most film-to-video transfers simply copy frame for frame and thus are sped up by a factor of approximately 5.
"Facts are stubborn things." --John Adams

Offline JayUtah

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #148 on: December 04, 2024, 04:02:08 PM »
If JayUTAH wants to become the FIRST to do what no others before have done - then have at it.  Do your best.  I'll reassess my statement after he makes his First-Ever presentation.

Again you're simply demanding that the answer be given according to your rules. I have explained my reasons for not doing that. I take it you have un-resigned from the thread. However we are still bogged down in remediating your befuddled understanding for how rockets work. Any answer I give, and any way I give it, will be ineffective until you can demonstrate a proper understanding of the problem.
"Facts are stubborn things." --John Adams

Offline najak

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Re: Hoax? - Lunar Launches - Too Fast
« Reply #149 on: December 04, 2024, 04:07:12 PM »
29.97 FPS was the Camera spec...
You were asked about the rendezvous footage that you say is impossibly jerky. The rendezvous footage was captured on the Maurer 16 mm film camera at 6 fps. Most film-to-video transfers simply copy frame for frame and thus are sped up by a factor of approximately 5.
The camera spec for the A16/17 Launches was 29.97 FPS.    I know the Rendezvous footages were 6 FPS, which enabled them to film for 15 minutes instead of 3.8 minutes.