That's what I mean. Launching that high is saving delta V budget by minimising gravity and atmospheric losses both of which increase the required budget.
The way I see it, it's 50,000 feet of climbing under that gravity that the rocket doesn't have to do anymore.Atmosphere, yes. Gravity, not so much.
At 50,000 feet gravity is about 0.5% lower, so it's hardly a great improvement.
Atmosphere, yes. Gravity, not so much.
At 50,000 feet gravity is about 0.5% lower, so it's hardly a great improvement.
Except you've saved all the fuel that you'd use to get to 50,000ft. Thanks to the tyranny of the rocket equation, I think that's likely to be significant.
I think the economics of this plane depends on turn around time. If they could get it turned around in short order (1 or 2 weeks), that's a lot of launches in one year.
Of course, the plane has to make the climb instead, so I'm not sure where the savings are.
Perhaps they were worried the interconnected tail could either collide with the rocket in carried flight, or that at launch, the rocket exhaust might put unacceptable aerodynamic loads on the interconnected tail, leading to unstable flight right at launch time?*Mike! said:That's all well and good, but I'd still feel better about it if the tail section was interconnected too. But what do I know?
He's clearly used the autostrut feature.
My reading is that it seems, in terms of saved Delta V, it's not a lot more than 500Km/s, which isn't a great deal on a 10Km/x budget, so I think you might be right.
Also most of the old shuttle emergency runways max out at 3.2km.
Although...
(Is it bad form to quote oneself?)
It is the first 500Ms (Not Km/s as I totally mistyped above) Whish is a bucketload of fuel compared to the last 500Km/s
So it's going to need a less powerful engine designed for flight in a more limited range of pressure?
Likely fuel and onboard equipment to monitor and manage the rocket ignition and deployment. I'm guessing the wheels are that big to distribute the weight properly. Also probably helps with clearance for the rocket.I wonder what is in the part of the plane that is above the wheels? Fuel? Do they really need it to be so big? If they could reduce the size of that then it would reduce the weight of the empty plane + less air resistance.
Think of it as a reusable first stage that is easy to land and doesn't have to carry any oxidizer.Except you've saved all the fuel that you'd use to get to 50,000ft.
If something goes wrong with the deployment, I would imagine that the plane needs to be able to land safely while still carrying the rocket loaded.
Wouldn't it be hilarious if they made it twice as big as it needs to be by accident, because they're idiots?I wonder what is in the part of the plane that is above the wheels? Fuel? Do they really need it to be so big? If they could reduce the size of that then it would reduce the weight of the empty plane + less air resistance.