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Wednesday, 3 October 2012

I Space Agency.

Maybe it is possible to build a self launch rocket even though wise labs hasn’t got resources  to contract resource a space craft that has extra capabilities to research outer limits’ of space. Possible using  the moon as a good starting point especially its darkened rim it gives enough light to power any space craft. With the use of old recycled rubber composites and other materials’ make perfect sense. How to build a rocket: Krasnow method as he drills through a tube of metal to create the nozzle the genius comes from miniaturising Nasa's technology for his own end, as he harness the energy. He using this experiment  in a safe and controlled manner, and managing to steer their dart to a moving target hundreds of thousands of miles in space effectually take a guidance computer. Meanwhile, Krasnow serves as a hardware hacker for the game company Valve, so fans of the company might be hoping that when the long-delayed game Half Life 3 comes out, the game's protagonist Gordon Freeman will be taking a trip into space on or at least sporting a jet-pack. The Atlantis Shuttle: Take Ben's experiments, scale it up, throw in a decade of research and billions of pounds, and you have yourself a shuttle to the moon For his DIY version, Krasnow used an acrylic tube to serve as solid fuel, adding a small amount of oxygen to allow the material to burn. While acrylic is usually not a flammable, pure oxygen it helps to ignite. What the design teaches us more than anything is how in essence, building the raw power of a rocket is relatively simple. In construction: Krasnow cuts the acrylic tube - which serves both as the rocket and as the fuel residue propellant.
Ignition: In Krasnow's video, he ignites one end of his see-through rocket, causing the acrylic and oxygen to ignite 3... 2... 1...: As the propellants take hold, the flame moves through the tube and huge amounts of thrust come out through the nozzle. Rockets work by combining two liquid propellants together in a small chamber. When ignited, the pressure of the burning gas is funnelled through a nozzle, resulting in a whole amount of thrust which, when directed ground-wards, has enough force to send a rocket all the way into space.


It took Nasa decades of research, now light composites can be mixed using Sir Branson epoxy resins saves millions of working hours and billions of dollars, but the result was getting man to land on the moon as well as a wealth of scientific and technological breakthroughs. Now one Californian man - employed in his day job as a 'hardware hacker' - has managed to pull off the same stunt in his own garage.  Now, while Ben Krasnow's rocket is unlikely to reach the outer atmosphere, it does have the unique advantage of being see-through, allowing YouTube viewers to see exactly how rockets defy gravity to launch themselves off the ground. but adding disks that burn off for example like in a jet engine except made out of magnetic propellant can give added trust to the first stage of a two stage rocket.

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