361 lines
		
	
	
		
			17 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			TeX
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			361 lines
		
	
	
		
			17 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			TeX
		
	
	
	
	
	
| 
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| 
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| \chapter{Basics of model rocket flight}
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| \label{chap-basics}
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| 
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| 
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| As rockets and rocket motors come in a huge variety of shapes and
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| sizes, different categories are defined for different levels of
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| rocketry.  {\it Model rocketry} itself is governed by the NAR Model
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| Rocket Safety Code~\cite{nar-safety-code} in the U.S. and other
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| similar regulations in other countries.  The safety code requires that
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| the model rockets be constructed only of light-weight materials
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| without any metal structural parts, and have a maximum lift-off weight
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| of 1.5~kg.  They may only used pre-manufactured motors of classes A--G
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| (see Section~\ref{sec-motor-classes} for the classification).
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| 
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| {\it High power rocketry} (HPR) is basically scaled up model
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| rocketry.  There are no weight restrictions, and they can use
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| pre-manufactured solid or hybrid rocket motors in the range of H--O.
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| The combined total impulse of all motors may not exceed 81\s920~Ns.
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| 
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| {\it Experimental} or {\it amateur rocketry} includes any rocketry
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| activities beyond model and high power rocketry.  This may include
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| for example using motor combinations that exceed the limits placed by
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| high power rocketry, building self-made motors or utilizing liquid
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| fueled motors. Finally there is {\it professional rocketry} which is
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| conducted for profit, usually by governments or large corporations.
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| 
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| Even though rockets come in many different sizes, the same principles
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| apply to all of them.  In this thesis the emphasis will be on model
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| rocketry, but the results are just as valid for larger rockets as long
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| as the assumptions of for example the speed range remain valid.  In
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| this chapter the basics of model rocketry and differences to high
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| power rocketry are explained.
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| 
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| 
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| \section{Model rocket flight}
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| 
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| A typical flight of a model rocket can be characterized by the four
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| phases depicted in Figure~\ref{fig-model-flight}:
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| %
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| \begin{enumerate}
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| \item Launch:  The model rocket is launched from a vertical launch
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|   guide.
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| \item Powered flight:  The motor accelerates the rocket during the
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|   powered flight period.
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| \item Coasting flight:  The rocket coasts freely until approximately
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|   at its apogee.
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| \item Recovery:  The recovery device opens and the rocket descends
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|   slowly to the ground.
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| \end{enumerate}
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| 
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| \begin{figure}
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| \centering
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| \epsfig{file=figures/model-flight,scale=0.8}
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| \caption{The basic phases of a typical model rocket flight:
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|   1.~Launch, 2.~Powered flight, 3.~Coasting and 4.~Recovery.}
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| \label{fig-model-flight}
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| \end{figure}
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| 
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| Model rockets are launched from a vertical launch guide that keeps the
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| rocket in an upright position until it has sufficient velocity for the
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| fins to aerodynamically stabilize the flight.  The NAR safety code
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| forbids launching a model rocket at an angle greater than 
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| $30^\circ$ from vertical.  A typical launch guide for small rockets is
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| a metal rod about 3-5~mm in diameter, and the launch lug is a short
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| piece of plastic tube glued to the body tube.  Especially in 
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| larger rockets this may be replaced by two extruding bolts, the ends
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| of which slide along a metal rail.  Use of a launch lug can be avoided
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| by a tower launcher, which has 3--4 metal bars around the rocket
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| that hold it in an upright position.
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| 
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| After clearing the launch guide, the rocket is in free, powered flight.
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| During this phase the motor accelerates the rocket while it is
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| aerodynamically stabilized to keep its vertical orientation.  When the
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| propellant has been used, the rocket is typically at its maximum
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| velocity.  It then coasts freely for a short period while the motor
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| produces smoke to help follow the rocket, but provides no
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| additional thrust.  Finally, at approximately the point of apogee, a
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| small pyrotechnical ejection charge is fired upwards from the motor
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| which pressurizes the model rocket and opens the recovery device.
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| 
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| High-power rocket motors usually have no ejection charges incorporated
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| in them.  Instead, the rocket carries a small flight computer that
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| measures the acceleration of the rocket or the outside pressure change
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| to detect the point of apogee and to open the recovery device.
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| Frequently only a small drogue parachute is opened at apogee, and the
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| main parachute is opened at some pre-defined lower altitude around
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| 100--300 meters.
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| 
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| The typical recovery device of a model rocket is either a parachute or
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| a {\it streamer}.  The parachutes are usually a simple planar circle
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| of plastic or fabric with 4--10 shroud lines attached.  A streamer is
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| a strip of plastic or fabric connected to the rocket, intended to
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| flutter in the air and thus slow down the descent of the rocket.
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| Especially small rockets often use streamers as their recovery device,
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| since even light wind can cause a light-weight rocket with a
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| parachute to drift a significant distance.
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| \section{Rocket motor classification}
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| \label{sec-motors}
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| \label{sec-motor-classes}
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| 
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| The motors used in model and high power rocketry are categorized based
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| on their total impulse.  A class `A' motor may have a total impulse in
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| the range of 1.26--2.50~Ns.  Every consecutive class doubles the
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| allowed total impulse of the motor.  Thus, a B-motor can have an
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| impulse in the range 2.51--5.00~Ns and a C-motor in the range
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| 5.01--10.0~Ns.  There are also classes \half A and \quarter A which
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| have impulse ranges half and one quarter of those of an A-motor,
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| respectively.  Commercial rocket motors are available up to
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| class~O with a total impulse of 30\s000~Ns~\cite{all-certified-motors}.
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| Table~\ref{tab-motor-classes} lists the impulse ranges for model
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| and high-power rocket motors. 
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| 
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| \begin{table}
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| \caption{Total impulse ranges for motor classes \quarter A--O.}
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| \label{tab-motor-classes}
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| \begin{center}
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| \begin{tabular}{cr@{--}l|cr@{--}l|cr@{--}l}
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| \hline
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| \quarter A & 0.0 & 0.625~Ns   & E & 20.01 & 40.0~Ns & K & 1280.01 & 2560~Ns \\
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| \half A & 0.626 & 1.25~Ns  & F & 40.01 & 80.0~Ns & L & 2560.01 & 5120~Ns \\
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| A    & 1.26 & 2.50~Ns   & G & 80.01 & 160~Ns  & M & 5120.01 & 10240~Ns \\
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| B    & 2.51 & 5.00~Ns   & H & 160.01 & 320~Ns   & N & 10240.01 & 20480~Ns \\
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| C    & 5.01 & 10.0~Ns   & I & 320.01 & 640~Ns   & O & 20480.01 & 40960~Ns \\
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| D    & 10.01 & 20.0~Ns  & J & 640.01 & 1280~Ns  &  \\
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| \hline
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| \end{tabular}
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| \end{center}
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| \end{table}
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| 
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| Another important parameter of a rocket motor is the thrust given by
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| the motor.  This defines the mass that may be lifted by the motor and
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| the acceleration achieved.  Small model rocket motors typically have
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| an average thrust of about 3--10~N, while high-power rocket motors can
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| have thrusts in excess of 5\s000~N.
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| 
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| The third parameter used to classify a model rocket motor is the
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| length of the delay between the motor burnout and the ignition of the
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| ejection charge.  Since the maximum velocity of different rockets
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| using the same type of motor can be vastly different, also the length
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| of the coasting phase varies.  Therefore motors with otherwise the
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| same specifications are often manufactured with several different
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| delay lengths.  These delay lengths do not apply to high-power rocket
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| motors, since they do not have ejections charges incorporated in them.
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| 
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| Model rocket motors are given a classification code based on these
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| three parameters, for example ``D7-3''.  The letter specifies the
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| total impulse range of the motor, while the first number specifies the
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| average thrust in Newtons and the second number the delay of the
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| ejection charge in seconds.  The delay number can also be replaced by
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| `P', which stands for {\it plugged}, \ie the motor does not have an
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| ejection charge.  Some manufacturers may also use an additional letter
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| at the end of the classification code specifying the
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| propellant type used in the motor.
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| 
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| Even motors with the same classification code may have slight
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| variations to them.  First, the classification only specifies the
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| impulse range of the motor, not the exact impulse.  In principle, a
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| D-motor in the lower end of the range might have a total impulse only
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| 1~Ns larger than a C-motor in the upper end of its range.  Second,
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| the code only specifies the average thrust of the motor.  The thrust
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| rarely is constant, but varies with time.
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| Figure~\ref{fig-thrust-curve} shows the typical thrust curve of a
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| small black powder rocket motor.  The motors typically have a short
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| thrust peak at ignition that gives the rocket an initial acceleration
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| boost before stabilizing to a thrust level a little below the average
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| thrust.  Statically measured thrust curves of most commercial rocket
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| motors are readily available on the
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| Internet~\cite{thrust-curve-database}.
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| 
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| \begin{figure}
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| \centering
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| \epsfig{file=figures/motors/D12-thrustcurve,width=9cm}
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| \caption{A typical thrust curve of an Estes D12-3 rocket motor and
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|   its average thrust.~\cite{D12-curve}}
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| \label{fig-thrust-curve}
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| \end{figure}
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| 
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| Also the propellant type may affect the characteristics of the motor.
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| Most model rocket motors are made up of a solid, pyrotechnical
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| propellant---typically black powder---that is cast into a suitable
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| shape and ignited on launch.  Since the propellant burns on its
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| surface, different thrust curves can be achieved by different mold
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| shapes.
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| 
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| % vesiraketit!
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| 
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| A significantly different motor type, {\it hybrid motors}, were
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| commercially introduced in 1995.  These motors typically include the
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| propellant and oxidizer in different states, typically a composite
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| plastic as the fuel and a separate tank of liquid nitrous oxide 
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| ($\rm N_2O$) as the oxidizer.  The plastic on its own does not 
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| burn very well, but provides ample thrust when the nitrous oxide is
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| fed through its core.  The nitrous oxide tank is
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| self-pressurized by its natural vapor pressure. However, since
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| temperature greatly affects the vapor pressure of nitrous oxide, the
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| thrust of a hybrid motor is also diminished if the oxidizer is cold.
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| On the other hand, the motor will burn longer in this case, and since
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| nitrous oxide is denser when cold, the motor may even yield a greater
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| total impulse.
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| 
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| The significance of this effect was observed when analyzing the video
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| footage of the launch of the first Finnish hybrid rocket,
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| ``Haisun<75><6E>t<EFBFBD>''~\cite{haisunaata-launch}.  The average thrust during the
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| first 0.5~seconds was determined to be only about 70~N, whereas the
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| static tests suggest the thrust should have been over 200~N.
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| Instead, the motor burned for over 10~seconds, while the normal thrust
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| curves indicate a burning time of 5--6~seconds.  This shows that the
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| temperature of the hybrid motor oxidizer can have a dramatic effect on
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| the thrust given by the motor, and the static test curve should be
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| assumed to be valid only in similar operating conditions as during the
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| test.
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| 
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| One further non-pyrotechnical rocket type is {\it water rockets}.
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| These are especially popular first rockets, as they require no special
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| permits and are easy to construct.  The water rocket includes a bottle
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| or other chamber that has water and pressurized air inside it.  On
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| launch the pressure forces the water out of a nozzle, providing thrust
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| to the rocket.  While simulating water rockets is beyond the scope of
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| this thesis, it is the aim that methods for modeling water rockets can
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| be added to the produced software in the future.
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| \section{Clustering and staging}
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| 
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| Two common methods used to achieve greater altitudes with model
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| rockets are {\it clustering} and {\it staging}.  A cluster has two or
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| more rocket motors burning concurrently, while staging uses motors
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| that burn consecutively.  The motor configuration of a cluster and
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| staged rocket is depicted in Figure~\ref{fig-cluster-stages}.
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| 
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| When a cluster is launched, the total thrust is the sum of the thrust
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| curves of the separate motors.  This allows greater acceleration and
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| a greater liftoff weight.  Staging is usually performed by using
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| zero-delay motors, that ignite the ejection charge immediately at
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| burnout.  The ejection charge fires towards the upper stage motor and
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| ignites the next motor.  High power motors with no ejection charges
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| can be clustered by using an onboard accelerometer or timer that
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| ignites the subsequent stages.  Staging provides a longer duration of
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| powered flight, thus increasing the altitude.
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| 
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| 
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| \begin{figure}
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| \centering
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| \parbox{65mm}{\centering
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| \epsfig{file=figures/motors/cluster,width=60mm} \\ (a)}
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| \hspace{10mm}
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| \parbox{40mm}{\centering
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| \epsfig{file=figures/motors/staged,width=30mm} \\ (b)}
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| \caption{The motor configuration for (a) a cluster rocket and (b) a
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|   two-staged rocket.}
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| \label{fig-cluster-stages}
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| \end{figure}
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| 
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| Clustering provides a greater acceleration at launch, but staging
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| typically provides greater altitude than a cluster with similar
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| motors.  This is because a clustered rocket accelerates quickly to a
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| greater speed thus also increasing the aerodynamic drag.  A staged
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| rocket has a smaller thrust for a longer period of time, which reduces
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| the overall effect of drag during the flight.
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| 
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| 
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| \section{Stability of a rocket}
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| \label{sec-stability}
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| 
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| When designing a new rocket, its stability is of paramount
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| importance.  A small gust of wind or some other disturbance may cause
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| the rocket to tilt slightly from its current orientation.  When this
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| occurs, the rocket centerline is no longer parallel to the
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| velocity of the rocket.  This condition is called flying at an 
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| {\it angle of attack $\alpha$}, where $\alpha$ is the angle between
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| the rocket centerline and the velocity vector.
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| 
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| When a stable rocket flies at an angle of attack, its fins produce a
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| moment to correct the rocket's flight.  The corrective moment is
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| produced by the aerodynamic forces perpendicular to the axis of the
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| rocket.  Each component of the rocket can be seen as producing a
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| separate normal force component originating from the component's CP,
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| as depicted in Figure~\ref{fig-normal-forces}.
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| 
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| \begin{figure}
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| \centering
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| \epsfig{file=figures/aerodynamics/component-normal-forces,width=130mm}
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| \caption{Normal forces produced by the rocket components.}
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| \label{fig-normal-forces}
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| \end{figure}
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| 
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| The effect of the separate normal forces can be combined into a single
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| force, the magnitude of which is the sum of the separate forces and
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| which effects the same moment as the separate forces.  The point on
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| which the total force acts is defined as the center of pressure or the
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| rocket.  As
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| can be seen from Figure~\ref{fig-normal-forces}, the moment produced
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| attempts to correct the rocket's flight only if the CP is located aft
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| of the CG. If this condition holds, the rocket is said to be 
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| {\it statically stable}.  A statically stable rocket always produces a
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| corrective moment when flying at a small angle of attack.  
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| 
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| The argument for static stability above may fail in two conditions:
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| First, the normal forces might cancel each other out exactly, in which
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| case a moment would be produced but with zero total force.  Second,
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| the normal force at the CP might be in the wrong direction (downward
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| in the figure), yielding an uncorrective moment.  However, we shall
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| see that the only component to produce a downward force is a boattail,
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| and the force is equivalent to the corresponding broadening of the
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| body.  Therefore the total force acting on the rocket cannot be zero
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| nor in a direction to produce an uncorrective moment when aft of the
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| CG.
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| 
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| The {\it stability margin} of a rocket is defined as the distance between
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| the CP and CG, measured in {\it calibers}, where one caliber is the
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| maximum body diameter of the rocket.  A rule of thumb among model
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| rocketeers is that the CP should be approximately 1--2 calibers aft of
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| the CG.  However, the CP of a rocket typically moves upwards as the
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| angle of attack increases.  In some cases, a 1--2 caliber stability
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| margin may totally disappear at an angle of attack of only a few
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| degrees.  As side wind is the primary cause of angles of attack, this
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| effect is called 
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| {\it wind caused instability}~\cite{galejs}.
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| 
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| Another stability issue concerning rocketeers is the
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| {\it dynamic stability} of a rocket.  A rocket that is statically
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| stable may still be poor at returning the rocket to the original
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| orientation quickly enough.  Model rockets may encounter several types of
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| dynamic instability depending on their shape, size and
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| mass~\cite[pp.~140--141]{stine}:
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| %
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| \begin{enumerate}
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| \item {\it Too little oscillation damping.}  In short, light-weight
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|   rockets the corrective moment may significantly over-correct the
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|   perturbation, requiring a corrective moment in the opposite
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|   direction.  This may lead to continuous oscillation during the
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|   flight.
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| \item {\it Too small corrective moment.}  This is the case of over-damped
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|   oscillation, where the corrective moment is too small compared to
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|   the moment of inertia of the rocket.  Before the rocket has been
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|   able to correct its orientation, the thrust of the motors may have
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|   already significantly affected the direction of flight.
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| \item {\it Roll-pitch coupling.}  If the model has a natural roll
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|   frequency (caused \eg by canting the fins) close to the oscillation
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|   frequency of the rocket, roll-pitch resonance may occur and cause
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|   the model to go unstable.
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| \end{enumerate}
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| 
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| By definition, dynamic stability issues are such that they occur over
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| time during the flight of the rocket.  A full flight simulation that
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| takes into account all corrective moments automatically also simulates
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| the possible dynamic stability problems.  Therefore the dynamic
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| stability of rockets will not be further considered in this
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| thesis. For an analytical consideration of the problem, refer to
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| \cite{advanced-model-rocketry}.
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| 
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| 
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| 
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