KarlChwe
Mechanical
- Mar 21, 2005
- 9
This is a little outside my expertise, so I am asking you, the excellecnt spacecraft engineering community (or one of them.) Sorry if I use incorrect terminology and such, or if this is the wrong kind of post for this forum.
I am a volunteer at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, in the astronomy and space exploration section called "Space Odyssey". We have an exhibit that is meant to allow visitors to experience maneuvering a spacecraft in zero-g (in 2 dimentions.) A 1/60 or so model of the space shuttle moves frictionlessly on a flat surface within a plexiglas enclosure. Visitors control the yaw and forward thrust of the model with a joystick. They have to "dock" the model with painted targets on the sides of the en
The problem is "fuel" for attitude control and forward thrust rockets. Previously we had used compressed air piped in by an umbilical suspended vertically overhead. The joystick controlled valves that would allow jets of air to shoot out of tiny nozzles mounted in the sides and back of the model. That approach caused lots of problems. The umbilical resisted twisting, and the weight of it created a constant pull toward the center, where the umbilical could become vertical (like a hanging rope.)
So we are trying to come up with a way to create self-contained reaction jets on the model.
Here are the design contstraints. The materials should be lightweight (say, less than five pounds for fuel, valves, nozzles, etc.) The motors should be able to operate for about 12 hours, on and off, on the onboard fuel. Everything should be cheap and readily available, or improvisable. The materials and their end products should be safe to breathe, touch and preferrably, to eat. The exhaust stream should be relatively cool. The amount of thrust required is small (I don't know how small), since it is moving an object on a relatively frictionless surface. In fact, we don't want too high thrust, because we don't want the craft to end up bouncing rapidly around the exhibit area. We can't really use sophisticated computer logic.
I thought about using cans of compressed CO2, but I decided that they would be depleted too quickly. I wonder if there is some way to continuously create CO2, perhaps chemically inside a pressurized vessel. Or perhaps a small compressor could pressurize air stored in a vessel. We could have a pressure regulator maintain steady pressure to the nozzles.
So 1. How do I create pressurized reaction gas? 2. How do I even figure out how much pressure is required, and how much gas? 3. What kind of nozzles, valves, tubing, etc. do I use?
Any tips or hints of where to go is much appreciated.
Thanks!
Karl
I am a volunteer at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, in the astronomy and space exploration section called "Space Odyssey". We have an exhibit that is meant to allow visitors to experience maneuvering a spacecraft in zero-g (in 2 dimentions.) A 1/60 or so model of the space shuttle moves frictionlessly on a flat surface within a plexiglas enclosure. Visitors control the yaw and forward thrust of the model with a joystick. They have to "dock" the model with painted targets on the sides of the en
The problem is "fuel" for attitude control and forward thrust rockets. Previously we had used compressed air piped in by an umbilical suspended vertically overhead. The joystick controlled valves that would allow jets of air to shoot out of tiny nozzles mounted in the sides and back of the model. That approach caused lots of problems. The umbilical resisted twisting, and the weight of it created a constant pull toward the center, where the umbilical could become vertical (like a hanging rope.)
So we are trying to come up with a way to create self-contained reaction jets on the model.
Here are the design contstraints. The materials should be lightweight (say, less than five pounds for fuel, valves, nozzles, etc.) The motors should be able to operate for about 12 hours, on and off, on the onboard fuel. Everything should be cheap and readily available, or improvisable. The materials and their end products should be safe to breathe, touch and preferrably, to eat. The exhaust stream should be relatively cool. The amount of thrust required is small (I don't know how small), since it is moving an object on a relatively frictionless surface. In fact, we don't want too high thrust, because we don't want the craft to end up bouncing rapidly around the exhibit area. We can't really use sophisticated computer logic.
I thought about using cans of compressed CO2, but I decided that they would be depleted too quickly. I wonder if there is some way to continuously create CO2, perhaps chemically inside a pressurized vessel. Or perhaps a small compressor could pressurize air stored in a vessel. We could have a pressure regulator maintain steady pressure to the nozzles.
So 1. How do I create pressurized reaction gas? 2. How do I even figure out how much pressure is required, and how much gas? 3. What kind of nozzles, valves, tubing, etc. do I use?
Any tips or hints of where to go is much appreciated.
Thanks!
Karl