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This is a water jet pack... but no, that's not me flying it. This is me. It's harder
than it looks, ok? But to understand how it works, we need to first talk rocket science.
Rocket science is meant to be one of the most complicated things in the world, but the basic
principle is incredibly simple. It's just Newton's 3rd law -- all forces come in pairs,
which are equal and opposite.
To demonstrate this, I'm using a fire extinguisher on a skateboard. As the carbon dioxide is
forced out the back of the extinguisher, it puts a force forwards on me causing me to
accelerate.
Or that's the theory anyway.
If you look closely, you can spot the exact moment I realize this is a fail.
So what was the problem here? Well the force applied to me by the carbon dioxide is equal
to the rate of mass ejected out the back of the fire extinguisher, call it m-dot for short,
multiplied by the velocity of that exhaust gas. So in this case the carbon dioxide wasn't
ejected fast enough to create a big enough force and overcome the small frictional forces
to get me to accelerate. But it can be done as has been demonstrated many times on Youtube.
When the space shuttle lifts off, exhaust gasses exit the nozzle at 3 to 4 km/s, ejecting
an amount of mass of 9000 kg/s. This creates thrust equal to 30,000,000 N or the equivalent
of about 2 million decent fire extinguishers.
Now imagine you are an astronaut preparing for launch in the space shuttle. You'd be
seated not vertically but horizontally, perpendicular to the acceleration.
That's because the human body is a bit like a water balloon where the water represents
your blood and the balloon represents your harder parts like your skeleton.
Now, if you are accelerated up really quickly, then your skeleton accelerates up at that
rate but your blood tends to stay where it is. And this results in the blood ending up
in your feet. Now since there's not enough oxygen going to your brain you would black
out.
But fighter pilots face an arguably worse fate when they accelerate down too fast, because
then the blood all rushes to their head and they suffer something called a red-out, where
the blood actually comes out of their eyes, nose, mouth, and ears.
But back to astronauts, since you are reclined, at worst the blood will end up in the back
of your body and the back of your head, but your brain will still have enough oxygen to
remain conscious.
Now as the spacecraft lifts off and starts speeding up, the acceleration is initially
a very reasonable five to eight meters per second squared - that's less acceleration
than an object in free fall here at the surface of Earth. But as the spacecraft continues
to burn fuel, its mass decreases, while the thrust remains essentially constant. Now Newton's
second law says that the acceleration of an object equals the net force applied to it
divided by its mass. So as the mass decreases, the acceleration increases -- and it increases
at an increasing rate. So much so that at the end of the rocket burn the thrust has
to actually be limited in order to keep the acceleration from going over three g's -- that's
three times the acceleration due to gravity or about 30 meters per second squared.
Now the term g-force has been invented to give a sense of the amount of force experienced
by astronauts, in multiples of the force we experience everyday. Right now you are experiencing
one g-force, probably on your butt if you're sitting down -- can you feel that force?
But accelerating at three g's you would experience three g-forces. So the force between your
back and the chair would be the same as if you had two of you stacked on top of you.
Hey, pipe down below, huh?
You guys are heavy. Oh, man.
You know that feeling when you're taking off in a plane and it feels like you're pressed
into the seat, well really it's the seat pressing into you. But if you imagine that feeling
times 20, that's what it would be like to be taking off in the space shuttle.
Now an interesting side note is that we think of the space shuttle's acceleration as being
mainly vertical because that's what we see when it lifts off. But that's actually not
true. Once the space shuttle exits the thicker part of the atmosphere, it turns horizontal
and accelerates up to its orbital velocity 28,000 km/h. So most of the acceleration of
a spacecraft, in orbit anyway, is horizontal.
So how is this like a jet pack? Well unlike the shuttle, you don't carry your own propellant
with you. And also, there's no chemical reaction releasing energy that drives the propellant
downwards. Instead the jetski pumps water out of the lake and up that hose at a rate
up to 60 litres per second. And then right on these nozzles here, the
water changes directions. So it goes from coming up to being fired out the bottom, and
that change in momentum as it goes over the bend is what actually pushed the jetpack up.
Because the jetpack's pushing down on the water, so by Newton's third law, the water
has to push up on the jetpack generating 1800 Newtons of thrust, that's
roughly equivalent to 150 decent fire extinguishers.
This could accelerate me at up to 1.5 g's
And you use your hands in order to steer. Lifting up to drive yourself upwards, moving
your hands down to accelerate forwards, and pretend like you're turning a big wheel very
gently in order to turn side to side.
One thing you don't want to do is try to explain the physics of the jetpack while in the air.
That's what I was trying to do here...
While you're learning your thrust is controlled by your instructor so if he sees you doing
something stupid he'll just turn off the thrust and drop you into the lake so you don't hurt
yourself.
That's generally a good idea unless you're on a collision course with the jetski.
I got a pretty fat lip from doing this but thankfully all my teeth were intact.
When the thrust is equal to my weight plus the weight of the water in the hose, then
I can hover or move with constant velocity. It's a common misconception that you need
a little bit of unbalanced force to move with a constant velocity -- in truth if the forces
are balanced, you will continue moving with whatever constant velocity you have.
The other common misconception about rockets is that you need something to push off like
the atmosphere. In reality, what you are pushing off is the propellant, so even without the
air around a water jetpack would still work because you're pushing off the water that
is coming out those nozzles.
If you want to go jetpacking I recommend you go easy on the controls. I mean the worst
thing you can do is overcompensate, which I think is a typical human reaction, because
you're reacting to where you are and how fast you're moving and you're not reacting to acceleration
which is the real thing that you can control.
So even if you're coming down towards the water quite quickly you may be slowing down
so it may be ok and you don't need to adjust anything. You just need to trust that the
jetpack will get you out of any trouble.
It's a pretty incredibly experience, feeling the power of that water rushing passed you.
It's the closest I've gotten to flying really. That's the power of physics.
Now many of you may not know that I have a second channel
called 2 Veritasium and I've been posting more videos on there recently so if you want
to check them out then click on this annotation or the link in the description.
If you ever want to download a Veritasium video, you can do that now via iTunes by clicking
this link and that's a service provided to me by Science Alert, which is one of the greatest
Facebook pages on science that exists so click on this link if you want to check them out.
Alright, thanks for watching.