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#1
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I think the pre-MECO ring of fire is the result of our perspective from
observing from on board the shuttle -- and the actual 3-D shape of the glowing region is a hollow cone with the shuttle at its apex. The cone, widening with distance from the shuttle, is the region of exhaust gases from the main engines, and the boundary of the cone is where the interaction with the thin upper atmosphere is creating this glow. It is at some angular distance from the centerline, perhaps, because the shuttle's own physical shockwave is protecting the very tip of this cone from getting the full blast from the ambient air at 55 miles altitude. From the side -- for observers on Earth, the visible light is strongest where the lines of sight pass through the greatest density of glowing plasma -- along the top and bottom edges as viewed from a distance. Hence these observers see the same 3-D shape in side profile, and it looks like a letter 'V'. |
#2
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Jim Oberg wrote:
I think the pre-MECO ring of fire is the result of our perspective from observing from on board the shuttle -- and the actual 3-D shape of the glowing region is a hollow cone with the shuttle at its apex. The cone, widening with distance from the shuttle, is the region of exhaust gases from the main engines, and the boundary of the cone is where the interaction with the thin upper atmosphere is creating this glow. It is at some angular distance from the centerline, perhaps, because the shuttle's own physical shockwave is protecting the very tip of this cone from getting the full blast from the ambient air at 55 miles altitude. From the side -- for observers on Earth, the visible light is strongest where the lines of sight pass through the greatest density of glowing plasma -- along the top and bottom edges as viewed from a distance. Hence these observers see the same 3-D shape in side profile, and it looks like a letter 'V'. I don't think it's exhaust gasses - as it's quite visible even after the tank has seperated. I think we're seeing the bow shock, which is an increasingly narrow cone as mach number (is it strictly correct to call it that?) increases. |
#3
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![]() "Ian Stirling" wrote I don't think it's exhaust gasses - as it's quite visible even after the tank has seperated. I think we're seeing the bow shock, which is an increasingly narrow cone as mach number (is it strictly correct to call it that?) increases. I agree there is a bow shock -- but the ring apears constant in angular size until MECO when it rather suddenly collapses to what is probably the remnant bow shock. But now that it's monday morning the professional plasma folks will come to the office and read their email!! grin |
#4
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![]() "Ian Stirling" wrote I don't think it's exhaust gasses - as it's quite visible even after the tank has seperated. I think we're seeing the bow shock, which is an increasingly narrow cone as mach number (is it strictly correct to call it that?) increases. Ian, see this view: http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/1...116_et_sep.jpg I don't see any trace of a trailing shock wave -- with the SSMEs off, the only glow is along leading-edge structure and on the orbiter's nose throuster plumes. |
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