This is something I've been wondering but have been afraid to ask (I just thought I should KNOW this). Someone asked me this and I couldn't answer it entirely.
There is a minimum velocity to escape the Earth's atmosphere. Is there also a minimum re-entry speed? I was asked why the shuttle has to re-enter the atmosphere so fast.
My answer was that it would take too much fuel to slow the shuttle down from it's orbital speed (what, a paltry 1-2 million pounds?!). But is there a minimum re-entry speed for an object? My somewhat-ejukated guess is that there is not.
I searched for this and didn't really find an answer, although I found an interesting theory that on long future spaceflights, other planets could be used to lower the ships velocity as it nears Earth, similar to the way they can also increase it. I have no idea if that's possible or not.
Anyone have the answer? Or maybe some wild schemes to slow re-entry?
I was thinking that a gigantic net could catch the shuttle, or maybe have an orbiting or lunar gas/petrol station (full serve) and...
There is a minimum velocity to escape the Earth's atmosphere. Is there also a minimum re-entry speed? I was asked why the shuttle has to re-enter the atmosphere so fast.
My answer was that it would take too much fuel to slow the shuttle down from it's orbital speed (what, a paltry 1-2 million pounds?!). But is there a minimum re-entry speed for an object? My somewhat-ejukated guess is that there is not.
I searched for this and didn't really find an answer, although I found an interesting theory that on long future spaceflights, other planets could be used to lower the ships velocity as it nears Earth, similar to the way they can also increase it. I have no idea if that's possible or not.
Anyone have the answer? Or maybe some wild schemes to slow re-entry?
I was thinking that a gigantic net could catch the shuttle, or maybe have an orbiting or lunar gas/petrol station (full serve) and...