Here is a simulation of the upcoming Starship Number 8 flight to 12.5km altitude and return. I didn't post a simulation of the projected 15km flight, because it seemed likely that the ship would go supersonic unless an engine was shut down prematurely, or there was a lot of propellant as ballast.A 12.5km apogee makes a subsonic flight more likely, reducing the risk in what is already a risky enough proposition.
The exclusion area extends a fair amount offshore, and isn't centered on the launch pad. Isn't it reasonable that some amount of fuel would be spent in translating away from the ground infrastructure? Wouldn't that translate into less deep throttling and higher TWR on liftoff?
Quote from: leetdan on 12/04/2020 10:12 pmThe exclusion area extends a fair amount offshore, and isn't centered on the launch pad. Isn't it reasonable that some amount of fuel would be spent in translating away from the ground infrastructure? Wouldn't that translate into less deep throttling and higher TWR on liftoff?It's certainly possible that the flight won't be straight up and down, as per some of the Grasshopper flights. As you can see from the sim, there is still about 40t of propellant remaining after landing. This ballast is required to keep the profile subsonic. So, there should be plenty of prop available to translate offshore a bit if they want, and literally glide back.However, the T/W also needs to be quite low for the three engine hoverslam. From the sim, it will be quite sporty at around 1.7g versus Falcon 9 at around 1.3g. On that basis, I'm expecting a launch quite like Saturn V, as Oersted suggests.
I wonder if they intend to have any significant propellant ballast - 40 t extra would be ~20 t sloshing around in the main tanks during the various flips and flops.
The 50% throttle case max velocity is the same as your simulation despite having 30 t of propellant less and 1 km higher cut off so I guess flightclub has higher ascent drag - I wonder if it might be related to the fact that it has a 9 m radius Starship
This is a speculative simulation of a single stage Starship P2P flight. With 9 SL Raptors, and a full propellant load, the initial T/W is a healthy 1.6. So, throttle back for MaxQ occurs early, at the 36 second mark. If the ship were to continue to a purely ballistic trajectory, re-entry g forces would be prohibitive (~20gs). Instead, I've used negative pitch to flatten the trajectory, reducing the re-entry flight path angle. This allows the ship to skip like a stone on a pond, extending the range out to 10,000kms. The peak g force on the first 'bounce' is just over 4. If the Starship had larger (dragon?) wings, and hence a greater lift coefficient, the peak could be reduced further, and the range extended beyond 10,000kms.
Will there be attempts to simulate SN8's actual flight profile? It would be interesting to see how much performance they're holding back due to the need to burn all the way to apogee. I assume it's possible to get rough speed and altitude estimate from some of the amateur videos.
It would also be very interesting to see an updated Starship P2P flight based on what we know so far based on SN8.
Quote from: su27k on 12/11/2020 02:01 amWill there be attempts to simulate SN8's actual flight profile? It would be interesting to see how much performance they're holding back due to the need to burn all the way to apogee. I assume it's possible to get rough speed and altitude estimate from some of the amateur videos.I've started on one, it's tricky without the telemetry. From the frost lines, does anyone have a good number for how much propellant was on board?
SN8-telemetry.png fails to open unless extension is manually changes to BMP.Also, the G-force meter seems to indicate passengers only experience 1.5G? The maneuver looks scary but might not be all that bad.
Quote from: DreamyPickle on 12/16/2020 05:23 pmSN8-telemetry.png fails to open unless extension is manually changes to BMP.Also, the G-force meter seems to indicate passengers only experience 1.5G? The maneuver looks scary but might not be all that bad.I was trying to imagine what that ride would feel like; would be interesting to hear it described in people terms. You're weightless in orbit; you'd feel some semblance of gravity when re-entering and decelerating(?); back to zero gravity when you're free falling at terminal velocity; then a brief 1.5g as you rotate and back to full g as you land?
Here is a simulation of an orbital Starship launch, updated to have a 28 engine Super Heavy. The payload is 150t to LEO, and I'm assuming Super Heavy has 8 x 210t thrust Raptors with gimbal and throttle, and 20 x 300t thrust Raptors without either.
Excellent work, as always! Out of curiosity, are you able to model performance to inclinations that would require dogleg maneuvers? Namely 53, 70, and 97.6 degrees for Starlink. Unclear if 97.6 degrees is even within the realm of possibility but that would be interesting to see