This time with correct units! [Edit: NOT]

Some things that stand out to me:

  1. Acceleration from liftoff until around 1:00 is pretty much flat. I know rockets throttle down for Max Q but I didn’t realize it would be that much.
  2. Speaking of Max Q, it was announced on stream around the 1 minute mark and we can see that the vehicle quickly begins to accelerate afterwards. That being said, it was planned to happen at around 0:52, according to SpaceX’s press release. I wonder why (if) it came late.
  3. You can see just before the 2 minute mark when the first stage throttles back to limit acceleration on the structure as the vehicle gets lighter. Notice that it still rises though!
  4. When the Starship engines light, it seems to have a similar TWR to the booster at liftoff. I wonder what it will be like when it starts carrying payloads!
  5. As I mentioned in my previous post, you can clearly see at the 7:30 mark that the acceleration suddenly flattens. Could certainly have been planned, but I’m starting to suspect a malfunction.

Data taken at 5 second intervals.

  • andrewA
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    8 months ago

    Looks like you updated the numbers but not the unit label. It still says km/s^2, which is a bit nuts. 35 m/s^2 is 0-80mph in 1s which is obviously fast but not destroy-everything fast like 0-80,000mph in 1s.

    • llamacoffee@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 months ago

      Thank you! I’m somewhat embarrassed, but these silly mistakes really show why I did not end up in a field that requires any kind of serious math. I just do this for fun and, thanks to people like you, am learning as I go along!