Katyusha rocket salvo - traduction vers Anglais
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Katyusha rocket salvo - traduction vers Anglais

FAMILY OF ROCKET ARTILLERY SYSTEMS
Katyusha rockets; Stalin's Organ; Stalin Organ; Katyoosha; BM-13; BM-8; Stalin organ; Stalinorgel; Katyusha rocket; Bm 14; Bm14; Katuysha; BM-31; Katyushas; BM-8-24; Katyushka; Katyusha Rocket Launchers; Katyusha rocket launchers; Katushya rocket launcher; Stalin's organ; Katyusha multiple rocket launcher
  • BM-31-12 on ZIS-12 at the Museum ([[Diorama]]) on Sapun Mountain, [[Sevastopol]]
  • Reloading a BM-13
  • Museum of the Great Patriotic War]], Moscow (2006)
  • Russian forces use BM-27 Uragan rocket launchers during the [[Second Chechen War]]
  • An M13 rocket for the Katyusha launcher on display in [[Musée de l'Armée]].
  • Katyusha on a [[ZIL-157]] truck
  • A battery of Katyusha launchers fires at German forces during the [[Battle of Stalingrad]], 6 October 1942

Katyusha rocket salvo      
salvo van Katyusha raketten
Katyusha rocket         
Katyusha projectiel
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
raketmotor (motor die van binnenuit vlamt, waarbij energie vrijkomt die zoals bij een straaljager naar buiten wordt gedreven en zorgt voor het voortdrijven van de raket)

Définition

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

Wikipédia

Katyusha rocket launcher

The Katyusha (Russian: Катю́ша, IPA: [kɐˈtʲuʂə] (listen)) is a type of rocket artillery first built and fielded by the Soviet Union in World War II. Multiple rocket launchers such as these deliver explosives to a target area more intensively than conventional artillery, but with lower accuracy and requiring a longer time to reload. They are fragile compared to artillery guns, but are cheap, easy to produce, and usable on almost any chassis. The Katyushas of World War II, the first self-propelled artillery mass-produced by the Soviet Union, were usually mounted on ordinary trucks. This mobility gave the Katyusha, and other self-propelled artillery, another advantage: being able to deliver a large blow all at once, and then move before being located and attacked with counter-battery fire.

Katyusha weapons of World War II included the BM-13 launcher, light BM-8, and heavy BM-31. Today, the nickname Katyusha is also applied to newer truck-mounted post-Soviet – in addition to non-Soviet – multiple-rocket launchers, notably the common BM-21 Grad and its derivatives.