| Welcome to the Beginner's Guide to Rockets | ||||
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| 
               The 
Beginner's Guide to Rockets will help you learn the  basic math and     
          physics that govern the design and flight of rockets.         
      We'll look at many different kinds of rockets, from               
 stomp
  rockets,               which are a special kind of artillery 
shell, to               bottle
  rockets, to               model
  rockets, to               full
  scale boosters.               We'll look at the similarities and 
the differences in  these rockets               and include some 
instructions for making and flying your  own rockets.                | ||||
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At this Web              
 site you can study how rockets operate at your own pace  and           
                     to your own level of interest.                There
 is a lot of mathematics at this web site, so we                provide 
background pages on many               mathematical
  topics.                The flight of the rocket               
involves the interaction of forces,
               so we include background pages on the fundamentals of    
           forces.
                  Aerodynamics
               plays a major role               in the flight of toy 
rockets and in the generation of  thrust               for full scale 
rockets, so there are background pages  devoted to               basic aerodynamics
  . There are also background               pages on thermodynamics
   and               gas
  dynamics  because of the role they               play in rocket   
            propulsion.
               Since we will be sending rockets to the               Moon 
  and               Mars ,
               we provide some background information on these planets 
in  addition                to our               home 
 planet.  
               The 
majority of the information at this web site is  presented at           
    a high school or early college level,               although much of
 the information can also be used by  middle school               
students and the general public. Information is provided  for           
    both students and teachers.                The site includes 
materials that were developed over a ten  year span               by 
several different authors, so the pages do not all               look 
the same.  We have added navigation buttons to ease movement across and within the work of a given author. Most of the pages are presented in the following format: a graphic at the top which the user can capture and incorporate into their own presentations or class notes; a text explaining the topic presented in the graphic and including many hyperlinks to related topics; navigation links at the bottom to related educational activities, closely related web pages, and an index of all the pages. 
               Using the
                Index
  of Web Pages,               you are never more                    
     than two clicks away from any other Web page at this site.         
      Just click on the word "Index" at the bottom of any page,  and    
            then click to a new page from the index.               We 
have intentionally               organized this site to mirror the 
unstructured nature of  the world               wide web.               
However, if you               prefer a more structured approach, you can
 also take one  of our               Guided
  Tours through the site. Each tour               provides a 
sequence of pages dealing with some type or  aspect of rockets.  Web pages that include Interactive Java applets are noted in the index. RocketModeler II, RocketThrust Simulator, and the AtmosModeler Simulator are provided to encourage students to explore science and math. The programs allow students to design and fly rockets on their personal computer and can be downloaded to operate off-line. Additional Classroom Activities 
               are also 
available at this site.  
               This site
 was prepared at the                NASA  Glenn Research 
Center               in support of the                Educational  
Programs Office               and was funded by the               Exploration  Systems Mission 
Directorate.               Many of the pages at this site were 
prepared               to support videoconferencing               for 
teachers and students as provided by the              Digital Learning  Network.      
         Much of the information available in the               Rockets  Educator's
 Guide               publication is available on-line at this site.  
Sumber: 
NASA Education  | ||||
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Rockets
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