In most rocket failures the detonation is caused by propellant touching hot engine parts, although RP-1 and LOX do form a highly explosive gel when mixed.
No, the cloud is the LH2 condensing water vapor in the air. The same effect would happen if there was no LOX onboard.
LH2 tank ruptured and LH2 spill down the sides of the vehicle.
in most rocket failures there's hardly any detonations at all, except for the FTS explosive charges
I know that; the hydrogen would still form water vapor from coming into contact with the oxygen in the surrounding atmosphere.
Detonation is what happens inside a car engine (after the gas and air are mixed and ignited).
Quote from: Jim on 03/06/2013 09:16 pmNo, the cloud is the LH2 condensing water vapor in the air. The same effect would happen if there was no LOX onboard. I know that; the hydrogen would still form water vapor from coming into contact with the oxygen in the surrounding atmosphere.QuoteLH2 tank ruptured and LH2 spill down the sides of the vehicle. Also during AC-1's ascent, there's a visible trail of LOX streaming from the Centaur. Not sure if this was intentional or not, but it does remind one of Atlas 3D where the drain valves failed to close at liftoff.
I believe the temporary venting was hydrogen. It stopped about 8 seconds prior to the weathershield failure.
It seems the B-2 thrust decay accounted for the "lurching" of 3D and not a launcher arm failure.
There is a dark stream in the B-2 exhaust which I do not understand. Obviously you need to discount the turbine exhaust just to the outside of B-2.
Atlas Incidents in ImagesImage 1 shows Atlas 6D in flight from VAFB January 26, 1960. Note that the two nacelle doors have not closed. No word of effect on flight.Image 2 shows Atlas-Agena carrying first SAMOS recon satellite aloft on October 11, 1960. Note one Atlas nacelle door is only partially closed. The notable part of the image is the escaping Agena stage attitude control gas from the left side of the interstage. The happened during an umbilical disconnect which tore off part of the plate on the vehicle. Without the attitude control gas the Agena burn was unsuccessful in achieving orbit. There are multiple launch images showing the gas loss.
Nice article on the space review concerning some failures, with root causes.Launch failures: what’s changed?http://www.thespacereview.com/article/2256/1
re: Atlas 3D. The dark stream in the B-2 exhaust was the engine running fuel rich from the LOX loss which would produce a lot of soot. AFAIK the actual cause of the explosion at T+26 seconds was LOX ducting rupture from loss of pressure to the propellant feed system--the video clearly shows that the explosion originates in the central thrust section and not outboard where the B-2 engine is. There were other Atlas launches and static firing tests which showed the very bad things that resulted from rupture of LOX ducting in the thrust section.After the booster section was blasted off the missile slowly fell to earth, a trail of fire coming out of the fuel staging disconnect valve and the sustainer and verniers inexplicably kept going albeit with a major drop in performance since most of the propellant in the tanks was rapidly spilling out from everything ripped open and finally the range safety officer put the poor thing out of its misery after letting it go as long as he could to collect the maximum amount of T/M data.We do not have an actual postflight report for 3D however other docs (including some posted in this thread) and film footage lets us more or less piece together the sequence of events.
https://www.thespacereview.com/article/2088/1