Rocket-powered aircraft

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A rocket-powered aircraft or rocket plane is an aircraft that uses a rocket for propulsion, sometimes in addition to airbreathing jet engines. Rocket planes can achieve much higher speeds than similarly-sized jet aircraft, but for much shorter periods of operation, typically only a few minutes. Unhindered by the need for oxygen from the atmosphere they are suitable for very high altitudes flight. They are also capable of delivering much higher acceleration and shorter takeoffs.

Rockets have been used simply to assist the main propulsion in the form of Jet Assisted Take Off (JATO) also known as "Rocket Assisted Take Off" (RATO).

Because of the expense and the various practical difficulties of operating rockets, these are poor choices for most aviation needs, and so are invariably specialised, mostly experimental, aircraft.

[edit] History

The first rocket-powered aircraft was the Lippisch Ente, flown in 1928. The only rocket plane ever to be mass-produced was the Messerschmitt Me 163 in 1944, one of several German World War II attempts at rocket-powered aircraft.

In the 1950s the British developed mixed power designs to cover the performance gap that existed in current turbojet designs. The rocket was the main engine for delivering the speed and height required for high speed interception of high level bombers and the turbojet gave increased fuel economy in other parts of flight, most notably to make sure the aircraft was able to make a powered landing rather than risking an unpredictable gliding return. The Saunders-Roe SR.53 was a successful design and was due to be developed into production when economics forced curtailment of most British aircraft programmes in the late 1950s. The advancement of the turbojet engine output made a return to mixed power unnecessary.

The first truly successful pure rocket plane was the North American X-15, which was used for several years and eventually broke Mach 6.0. Hoever its was incapable of taking off under its own power and was a pure research vehicle.

The development of SpaceShipOne, first flown in 2003, and XCOR Aerospace's EZ-Rocket, suggests that rocket planes may become more common, as spaceplanes are one of very few practical ways to reach space.

Rocket-powered aircraft are often not designed to launch in the same manner as normal aircraft. Some types are launched after jettison of a carrier plane or vertically as normal rockets (see list of rocket planes)

[edit] See also