September 6th, 2008
A nose cone that contained one of the Voyager spacecraft is seen here mounted on top of a Titan III/Centaur launch vehicle.
South African Airways Boeing 747-400. The nose cone is the most forward fuselage piece, ahead of all the windows.
The nose cone of an RAF Typhoon F2
The term nose cone is used to refer to the forwardmost section of a rocket, guided missile or aircraft. The cone is shaped to offer minimum aerodynamic resistance. Nose cones are also designed for travel in and under water and in high speed land vehicles.
On a rocket vehicle it consists of a chamber or chambers in which a satellite, instruments, animals, plants, or auxiliary equipment may be carried, and an outer surface built to withstand high temperatures generated by aerodynamic heating. Much of the fundamental research related to hypersonic flight was done towards creating viable nose cone designs for the atmospheric reentry of spacecraft and ICBM reentry vehicles.
In a satellite vehicle, the nose cone may become the satellite itself after separating from the final stage of the rocket or it may be used to shield the satellite until orbital speed is accomplished, then separating from the satellite.
The shape of the nose cone must be chosen for minimum drag so a solid of revolution is used that gives least resistance to motion. The article on nose cone design contains possible shapes and formulas.
Due to the extreme temperatures involved, nose cones for high-speed applications (eg. hypersonic speeds or atmospheric reentry of orbital vehicles) have to be made of refractory materials. Pyrolytic carbon is one choice, reinforced carbon-carbon composite or HRSI ceramics are other popular choices. Other design strategy is using ablative heat shields, which get consumed during operation, disposing of excess heat that way. Popular materials for ablative shields are eg. carbon phenolic, polydimethylsiloxane composite with silica filler and carbon fibers, or, like in case of some Chinese FSW reentry vehicles, oak wood.
See also
- Nose cone design
- Inlet cone
References
- ^ “Ballistic Missile Basics”. Special Weapons Primer. Federation of American Scientists. Retrieved on 2008-02-03.
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nose_cone”
Categories: Rocketry
- Nose cone design
Given the problem of the aerodynamic design of the nose cone section of any vehicle or body meant to travel through a compressible fluid medium (such ...
- Drogue
This article is about a device used in the marine environment. For the type of parachute used in aeronautics, see drogue parachute.
A drogue
A ...
- Freestyle walking
This article or section has multiple issues. Please help improve the article or discuss these issues on the talk page.
It does not cite any re...
- California bearing ratio
The California bearing ratio (CBR) is a penetration test for evaluation of the mechanical strength of road subgrades and basecourses. It was developed...
- Bollard
For other uses, see Bollard (disambiguation).
A mooring bollard.
A bollard is a short vertical post typically found where large ships dock. Boll...
- Kosmonaut Yuri Gagarin
A starboard view of the Soviet civilian space research ship Kosmonaut Yuri Gargarin underway (8/11/1989).
Class overview
Name:
Sofiya (Modified...
- Train robbery
This article or section has multiple issues. Please help improve the article or discuss these issues on the talk page.
It does not cite any re...
- Atmospheric reentry
"Reentry" redirects here. For reentry in cardiac medicine, see Reentrant dysrhythmia.
Further information: Re-Entry (Marley Marl album) and ...
- Pendulum rocket fallacy
The pendulum rocket fallacy is a common fundamental misunderstanding of the mechanics of rocket flight and how rockets remain on a stable trajectory.
...
- Loadmaster
This article or section deals primarily with the United States and does not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please improve this articl...
- Road traffic control
Traffic Control bollards separating the road from the worksite. Note the chevron signs indicating worksite exit points.
For the road traffic sc...
- Rocket engine nozzle
Figure 1: A de Laval nozzle, showing approximate flow velocity increasing from green to red in the direction of flow
A rocket engine nozzle is a...
- Flight engineer
In aviation, a flight engineer is a member of the aircrew of some aircraft. The flight engineer is responsible for monitoring and controlling many of ...
- Flight instruments
Six basic instruments in a light twin-engine airplane arranged in the basic-T. From top left: airspeed indicator, attitude indicator, altimeter, t...
- Expedition Global Eagle
The Global Eagle logo as it appeared on the nose of the fuselage during the early stages of the effort
Expedition Global Eagle was the first att...
Posted in Uncategorized |