enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cold gas thruster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_gas_thruster

    A cold gas thruster (or a cold gas propulsion system) is a type of rocket engine which uses the expansion of a (typically inert) pressurized gas to generate thrust.As opposed to traditional rocket engines, a cold gas thruster does not house any combustion and therefore has lower thrust and efficiency compared to conventional monopropellant and bipropellant rocket engines.

  3. Thermal rocket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_rocket

    The simplest case of a thermal rocket is the case in which a compressed gas is held in a tank, and is released through a nozzle. This is known as a cold gas thruster.The thermal source, in this case, is simply the energy contained in the heat capacity of the gas.

  4. ThrustMe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ThrustMe

    It carries ThrustMe's I2T5 non-pressurized cold gas thruster, the first in existence. [16] BeiHangKongshi-1 is a 12-unit cubesat developed by Spacety. The satellite carries ThrustMe's NPT30-I2-1U, the first iodine electric propulsion system sent into space. [3] The cubesat was launched on board the Long March 6 on 6 November 2020. [17]

  5. Thrusters (spacecraft) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thrusters_(spacecraft)

    Some devices that are used or proposed for use as thrusters are: Cold gas thruster; Electrohydrodynamic thruster, using ionized air (only for use in an atmosphere) Electrodeless plasma thruster, electric propulsion using ponderomotive force; Electrostatic ion thruster, using high-voltage electrodes; Hall effect thruster, a type of ion thruster

  6. Monopropellant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopropellant

    The most common use of monopropellants [3] is in low-impulse monopropellant rocket motors, [4] such as reaction control thrusters, the usual propellant being hydrazine [5] [6] which is generally decomposed by exposure to an iridium [7] [8] catalyst bed (the hydrazine is pre-heated to keep the reactant liquid).

  7. Cryogenic rocket engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryogenic_rocket_engine

    RL-10 is an early example of cryogenic rocket engine.. Rocket engines need high mass flow rates of both oxidizer and fuel to generate useful thrust. Oxygen, the simplest and most common oxidizer, is in the gas phase at standard temperature and pressure, as is hydrogen, the simplest fuel.

  8. Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variable_Specific_Impulse...

    The propellant, a neutral gas such as argon or xenon, is injected into a hollow cylinder surfaced with electromagnets. On entering the engine, the gas is first heated to a "cold plasma" by a helicon RF antenna/coupler that bombards the gas with electromagnetic energy, at a frequency of 10 to 50 MHz , [ 3 ] stripping electrons off the propellant ...

  9. Propellant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propellant

    Rocket propellant may be expelled through an expansion nozzle as a cold gas, that is, without energetic mixing and combustion, to provide small changes in velocity to spacecraft by the use of cold gas thrusters, usually as maneuvering thrusters. To attain a useful density for storage, most propellants are stored as either a solid or a liquid.