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Burn time was shorter than the successful may test, so seems to have been an engine failure. Exactly how much shorter is not really established, but probably 10 seconds or so given trajectory.
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The FAA have just approved a launch licence for the NS system, allowing commercial flight of 'active and passive payloads'.
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It doesn't really mean anything, a missile of this range is going to break up on re-entry. All that matters is if the RV survives. We've no word one way or the other, but based on how it handled the HS-14 tests it probably did.
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The analysis is based on questionable assumptions. This article goes through better than I could.
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Most modern fairings have a rounded 'ogival' fairing, it's just a lot of rockets use old designs. The atlas 5 pointed fairing is a direct descendent of the original atlas-centaur fairing from the 60s, and the DIVH fairing was designed for Titan IV in the eighties.
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I doubt the GSE is the sole problem they noticed during the flight. For a start they said before the launch that the next two rockets were already ready, so why the wait to at least October?
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Would this rocket propulsion concept work?
Kryten replied to quasarrgames's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Solid fuel needs to be under pressure to burn quickly and completely enough to be useful propellant; that's part of why their dry mass is so high, the casing needs to contain that pressure. If you end up with any holes, and it would be very difficult to avoid them in a situation like this, you're not going to have a useful engine anymore. If you do manage to avoid holes, you've just reinvented the casing. -
Given there've been thousands of scud combat launches, nitric acid/kerosene is quite possibly the most used liquid prop combination ever. It's either that or ethanol/lox from V-2 launches.
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Boeing's ALASA used a monoprop mixture of nitrous and ethylene. It ended up being cancelled because they basically couldn't get it to not explode in ground tests.
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Delta IVH had a partial failure on the first launch due to resonance effects with the fuel; the fuel sensors were exposed prematurely, causing early shutdown.
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Why would it require some fundamentally different mechanism to any other canyon? The length is just a factor of the shape and relief of Greenland.
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For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
Kryten replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Also the supposed EM drive thrust is far higher than would be expected from a photon drive of the same input energy. -
http://allthingsnuclear.org/dwright/new-north-korean-icbm This launch demonstrated enough range to probably hit New York, and maybe hit DC. The re-entry was successful. We know because it was close enough to the Japanese coast that people saw it; http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/special/northkorea_provocation/ (RVs tend to be very bright upon re-entry, so it's probably not as close as it looks.)
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Pegasus uses three stages, and the rocket you're thinking of also had three stages.