169 lines
		
	
	
		
			8.7 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			TeX
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			169 lines
		
	
	
		
			8.7 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			TeX
		
	
	
	
	
	
| 
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| \chapter{Introduction}
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| 
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| Model rocketry is a sport that involves designing, constructing and
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| launching self-made rockets.  Model rockets vary greatly in size,
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| shape, weight and construction from detailed scale models of
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| professional rockets to lightweight and highly finished competition
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| models.  The sport is relatively popular and is often cited as a
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| source of inspiration for children to become engineers and
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| scientists.
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| 
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| The hobby started as amateur rocketry in the 1950's when hobbyists
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| wanted to experiment their skill with building rockets.  Designing,
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| building and firing self-made {\it motors} was, however, extremely dangerous,
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| and the American Rocket Society (now the American Institute of
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| Aeronautics and Astronautics, AIAA) has estimated that about one in seven
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| amateur rocketeers during the time were injured in their hobby.  This
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| changed in 1958 when the first commercially-built model rocket
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| motors became available.  Having industrially-made, reasonably-priced
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| and safe motors available removed the most dangerous aspect of amateur
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| rocketry.  This along with strict guidelines to the design and
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| launching of model rockets formed the foundation for a safe and
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| widespread hobby.~\cite[pp.~1--3]{stine}
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| 
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| Since then model rocketry has spread around the globe and among all
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| age groups.  Thousands of rockets ranging from 10~cm high miniatures
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| to large models reaching altitudes in excess of 10~km are launched
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| annually.  Model rocket motors with thrusts from a few Newtons up to
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| several kilo-Newtons are readily available.  Since its forming in
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| 1957, over 90\s000 people have joined the National Association of
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| Rocketry (NAR) in the U.S. alone.
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| %  Model rocketry is used as an
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| %educational device in numerous of schools and by many youth
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| %organizations.
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| 
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| In designing rockets, the {\it stability} of a rocket is of central
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| priority.  A stable rocket corrects its course if some outside
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| force disturbs it slightly.  A disturbance of an unstable rocket
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| instead  increases until the rocket starts spinning in the
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| air erratically.  As shall be discussed in
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| Section~\ref{sec-stability}, a rocket is deemed 
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| {\it statically stable} if its center of pressure (CP) is aft of its
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| center of gravity (CG)\footnote{An alternative term would be 
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|   {\it center of mass}, but in the context of model rocketry, we are
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|   interested in the effect of gravity on the rocket.  Thus, the term
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|   center of gravity is widely used in model rocketry texts, and this
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|   convention will be followed in this thesis.}.
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| The center of gravity of a rocket can be easily calculated in advance
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| or determined experimentally.  The center of pressure, on the other
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| hand, has been quite hard to determine either analytically or
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| experimentally.  In 1966 James and Judith Barrowman developed an
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| analytical method for determining the CP of a slender-bodied rocket at
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| subsonic speeds and presented their results as a research and
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| development project at the 8th National Association of Rocketry Annual
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| Meeting (NARAM-8)~\cite{barrowman-rd}, and later as a part of James
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| Barrowman's Master's thesis~\cite{barrowman-thesis}.  This method has
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| become known as the {\it Barrowman method} of determining the CP of a
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| rocket within the model rocketry community, and has a major role in
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| determining the aerodynamic characteristics of model rockets.
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| 
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| Another important aerodynamic quantity of interest is the 
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| {\it aerodynamic drag} of a rocket.  Drag is caused by the flow of air
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| around the rocket and it can easily reduce the maximum altitude of a
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| rocket by 50--80\% of the otherwise theoretical maximum.  Estimating
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| the drag of a model rocket is a rather complex task, and the effects
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| of different design choices are not always very evident to a
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| hobbyist.
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| 
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| Knowing the fundamental aerodynamic properties of a rocket allows one
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| to simulate its free flight.  This involves numerically integrating
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| the flight forces and determining the velocity, rotation and position
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| of the rocket as a function of time.  This is best performed by
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| software designed for the purpose of model rocket design.
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| 
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| RockSim~\cite{rocksim} is one such piece of software.  It is a
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| commercial, proprietary program that allows one to define the geometry
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| and configuration of a model rocket, estimate its aerodynamic
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| properties and simulate a launch with different rocket motors.  It has
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| become the {\it de facto} standard software for model rocket
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| performance estimation.  However, as a proprietary program, it is
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| essentially a ``black-box'' solution.  Someone wishing to study or
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| validate the methods will not be able to do so.  Similarly extending
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| or customizing the functionality or refining the calculations methods
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| to fit ones needs is impossible.  The software is also only available
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| on select operating systems.  Finally, the cost of the software may be
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| prohibitive especially for younger hobbyists, voluntary organizations,
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| clubs and schools.
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| 
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| Open Source software, on the other hand, has become an increasingly
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| competitive alternative to proprietary software.  Open Source allows
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| free access to the source code of the programs and encourages
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| users with the know-how to enhance the software and share their
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| changes~\cite{oss-principles}.  Success stories such as the Linux
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| operating system, the OpenOffice.org office suite, the Firefox web
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| browser and countless others have shown that Open Source software can
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| often achieve and even exceed the quality of expensive proprietary
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| software.
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| 
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| 
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| \section{Objectives of the thesis}
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| 
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| The objectives of this thesis work are to:
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| %
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| \begin{enumerate}
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| \item Develop and document relatively easy, yet reasonably accurate
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|   methods for the calculation of the fundamental aerodynamic
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|   properties of model rockets and their numerical simulation;
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| 
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| \item Test the methods developed and compare the results with other
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|   estimates and actual experimental data; and
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| 
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| \item Implement a cross-platform, Open Source model rocket design and
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|   simulation software that uses the aforementioned methods, is at the
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|   same time easy to use and yet versatile, and which is easily
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|   extensible and customizable for user requirements, new types of rocket
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|   components and new estimation methods.
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| \end{enumerate}
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| 
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| The methods presented will largely follow the methods developed by
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| Barrowman~\cite{barrowman-rd,barrowman-thesis}, since these are
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| already familiar to the rocketry community.  Several extensions to the
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| methods will be added to allow for more accurate calculation at larger
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| angles of attack and for fin shapes not accounted for in the original
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| paper.  The emphasis will be on subsonic flight, but extensions will
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| be made for reasonable estimation at transonic and low supersonic
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| velocities.
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| 
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| The software developed as part of the thesis is the OpenRocket
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| project~\cite{openrocket}.  It is an Open Source rocket development
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| and simulation environment written totally in Java.  The program
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| structure has been designed to make full use of object oriented
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| programming, allowing one to easily extend its features.  The software
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| also includes a framework for creating user-made 
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| {\it listener components} (discussed in Section~\ref{sec-listeners})
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| that can listen to and interact with the simulation while it is
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| running.  This allows a powerful and easy way of interacting with the
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| simulation and allows simulating for example guidance systems.
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| 
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| One possible future enhancement that has also specifically been
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| considered throughout the development is calculating the aerodynamic
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| properties using computational fluid dynamics (CFD).  CFD calculates
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| the exact airflow in a discretized mesh around the rocket.  This would
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| allow for even more accurate calculation of the aerodynamic forces for
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| odd-shaped rockets, for which the methods explained herein do not
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| fully apply.
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| 
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| It is anticipated that the software will allow more hobbyists the
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| possibility of simulating their rocket designs prior to building them
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| and experimenting with different configuration, thus giving them a
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| deeper understanding of the aerodynamics of rocket flight.  It will
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| also provide a more versatile educational tool since the simulation
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| methods are open and everyone will be able to ``look under the hood''
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| and see how the software performs the calculations.
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| 
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| In Chapter~\ref{chap-basics} a brief overview of model rocketry and
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| its different aspects will be given.  Then in
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| Chapter~\ref{chap-aerodynamics} methods for calculating the
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| aerodynamic properties of a general model rocket will be presented.
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| In Chapter~\ref{chap-simulation} the aspects of simulating a rocket's
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| flight are considered.  Chapter~\ref{chap-software} then explains how
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| the aerodynamic calculations and simulation are implemented in the
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| OpenRocket software and presents some of its features.  In
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| Chapter~\ref{chap-experimental} the results of the software simulation
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| are compared with the performance of constructed and launched rockets.
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| Chapter~\ref{chap-conclusion} then presents a summary of the
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| achievements and identifies areas of further work.
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| 
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| 
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