Reentry
Col John E. Keesee
MIT Dept of Aeronautics and Astronautics
November 25, 2003
Background
? An ICBM with a range of 6500 miles has a
stagnation temperature of 12,000 oF, 2000
oF hotter than the surface of the sun
? Calculations showed that the optimum
design for structural strength, resistance to
heating, and free flight stability was a long,
needle nosed reentry body
– But it would vaporize during reentry
Background
? Harry Julian Allen proposed an alternate
solution, using pencil and paper
– Contradicted 50 years of research
– Suggested a blunt body would better put more
of the heat the air and less into the body
– Strong bow shockwave
Background
? Still needed unusual materials to survive
the extreme heating conditions
– Heat sinks
? Copper, tungsten, molybdenum, beryllium
? Shuttle
– Ablators
? Teflon, nylon, fiberglass
? Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, ICBMs
Thermal Barrier
2
2
1
2
2
c
c
V
m
Q
QmVKE
=
==
Material Energy to
Vaporize
BTU/lb
Melting
Temperature
oR
Tungsten 1870 6500
Titanium 3865 3700
Beryllium oxide 13,400 2900
Graphite 28,700 6800
Stagnation Temperature
po
pop
CVT
VTCTC
2/
2/
2
2
∞
∞∞
=
+=
V (fps) To oR
10,000 8,325
20,000 33,300
26,000 56,277
How Much Heat Actually Enters
the Body
Reentry Body Shapes
? http://kittyhawk.public.hq.nasa.gov/essay/
Evolution_of_Technoogy/reentry/Tech19.h
tm