rocket$70942$ - translation to german
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rocket$70942$ - translation to german

EARLY STEAM LOCOMOTIVE
Stephenson's rocket; Rocket locomotive; Rocket (locomotive); Stephensons rocket; Stephenson rocket; Stephenson Rocket; Rocket (train); Rocket (steam locomotive); George Stephenson's rocket; Stevenson's Rocket; Stevenson rocket; George Stephenson's Rocket; Robert Stephenson's Rocket; The Rocket (locomotive)
  • [[Buster Keaton]] made whimsical use of his replica ''Rocket'' in ''[[Our Hospitality]]''.
  • ''Rocket'' 150]] event
  • A cutaway view of the cylinder and steam valve of the replica Rocket
  • Transport Museum]] in [[Nuremberg]] during the exhibition "Adler, Rocket and Co."
  • ''Rocket'' as preserved in the [[Science Museum, London]].
  • hair}}
  • A closer view

rocket      
v. hochschießen; aufsteigen
rocket motor         
  • Armadillo Aerospace's quad vehicle]] showing visible banding (shock diamonds) in the exhaust jet
  • Exhaust exits nozzle
}}
  • Opel RAK.1 - World's first public flight of a manned  rocket-powered plane on September 30, 1929
  • The four expansion regimes of a de Laval nozzle:
• under-expanded
• perfectly expanded
• over-expanded
• grossly over-expanded
  • Rocket vehicle mechanical efficiency as a function of vehicle instantaneous speed divided by effective exhaust speed. These percentages need to be multiplied by internal engine efficiency to get overall efficiency.
  • Rocket thrust is caused by pressures acting in the combustion chamber and nozzle. From Newton's third law, equal and opposite pressures act on the exhaust, and this accelerates it to high speeds.
  • Exhaust exits nozzle
}}
  • Viking 5C rocket engine]] used on [[Ariane 1]] through [[Ariane 4]]
NON-AIR BREATHING JET ENGINE USED TO PROPEL A MISSILE OR VEHICLE
Chemical rocket; Rocket motor; Rocket engines; Rocket engine cooling; Vacuum Isp; Hydrogen reactor; Rocket Engines; Rocket Dynamics; Rocket Engine; Throttleable rocket engine; Rocket engine throttling; Rocket engine restart; History of rocket engines; Rocket ignition; Rocket engine transients; Rocket engine ignition; Rocket-engine; Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly
Raketenmotor
thrust chamber         
  • Figure 1: A de Laval nozzle, showing approximate flow velocity increasing from green to red in the direction of flow
  • RSA-3]] rocket
  • Diagram of a de Laval nozzle, showing flow velocity (v) increasing in the direction of flow, with decreases in temperature (t) and pressure (p). The Mach number (M) increases from subsonic, to sonic at the throat, to supersonic.
  •  grossly overexpanded.
 }}
If a nozzle is under- or overexpanded, then loss of efficiency occurs relative to an ideal nozzle.

Grossly overexpanded nozzles have improved efficiency relative to an underexpanded nozzle (though are still less efficient than a nozzle with the ideal expansion ratio), however the exhaust jet is unstable.<ref name="NASA"/>
TYPE OF PROPELLING NOZZLE
Rocket engine nozzles; Rocket nozzle; Rocket engine expansion; Thrust chamber
Brennkammer, Antriebskammer (bei Raketen)

Definition

rocket
n.
device propelled by a rocket engine or explosives
1) to fire; launch a rocket
2) a booster; liquid-fuel; long-range; multistage; solid-fuel rocket
reprimand
(colloq.) (BE)
3) to give smb. a rocket
4) to get a rocket

Wikipedia

Stephenson's Rocket

Stephenson's Rocket is an early steam locomotive of 0-2-2 wheel arrangement. It was built for and won the Rainhill Trials of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway (L&MR), held in October 1829 to show that improved locomotives would be more efficient than stationary steam engines.

Rocket was designed and built by Robert Stephenson in 1829, and built at the Forth Street Works of his company in Newcastle upon Tyne.

Though Rocket was by no means the first steam locomotive, it was the first to bring together several innovations to produce the most advanced locomotive of its day. It is the most famous example of an evolving design of locomotives by Stephenson that became the template for most steam engines in the following 150 years.

The locomotive was preserved and displayed in the Science Museum in London until 2018, after which it was displayed at the National Railway Museum in York.