Bottle Rocket Fins
Most recent answer: 10/22/2007
- mark (age 15)
crestline oh.
The fins counteract sideways motion of the rocket. Air flows smoothly past them if the rocket is traveling along its axis. If there is any sideways motion, then the air striking the fins pushes the rocket back towards straight motion. Its not perfect -- the rocket may still go around in circles, but the idea is to make the path straighter than it otherwise would be.
The fins can be made out of cardboard and taped to the bottle. Their shape probably isnt too important (the fins on real rockets take a wide variety of shapes), although their area is. It probably isnt good to make them too heavy. If you make them with pointed ends it will be easier for them to bend out of shape when you set the rocket down. The plane of the fins should contain the axis of the rocket -- dont bend them or they will cause drag on the rocket in flight and may cause it to spin. Spin is used to help stabilize rifle bullets, but in the case of a water bottle rocket it probably wont make much difference because the bottle may spin but the water inside would not. That would rob energy from the flight anyhow, so it sounds like not such a good idea.
Tom
(published on 10/22/2007)
Follow-Up #1: Bad Ideas with Bottle Rockets
- Hillary (age 15)
Lewiston, Idaho,United States
I dont know for sure if hot water or cold water would work better with a bottle rocket. I bet it wouldnt make much difference, since the water is just there to provide some mass for the exhaust. I think that it works best when the mass of the water is about the same as the mass of the rocket. The density of water only changes a little as the temperature changes, so the room left for compressed air would be nearly the same whether the water were hot or cold. Hot water is less viscous (it flows with less friction), so it wouldnt lose quite as much energy going out the nozzle, but that too probably isnt a big factor.
I would really suggest that you dont try this yourself. Putting boiling hot water in a bottle rocket is a very bad idea since the water can spray out and hit people on the ground. In situations like this, boiling water can cause very serious burns.
-Tamara
(published on 10/22/2007)
Follow-Up #2: bottle rocket fins
- t dog (age 16)
wooster ohio usa
I'd expect that the bigger rockets would go farther. Let's say you've picked some thickness of bottle. That sets the maximum pressure that can be used. Then the total stored energy is proportional to the volume. The mass of the bottle itself is only proportional to the area, for fixed thickness. So your energy/mass ratio gets better for bigger bottles. Once the mass of the water is a lot bigger than that of the bottle, that won't improve much. However, air friction is relatively more important for small bottles. So I bet the bigger bottle will go farther.
Mike W.
(published on 05/07/2011)
Follow-Up #3: bottle rocket fins and thrust
- Hinh N.K (age 14)
Mississauga,Canada,Ontario
One thing that definitely won't happen is for the spin to add thrust. It takes energy to set things spinning, and that energy comes out of the same stored energy that provides the thrust. Spinning will reduce the thrust. As you suspected, the mechanism is that the same force from the air on the fins that sets them spinning also pushes them backwards.
Mike W.
(published on 10/03/2011)
Follow-Up #4: bottle rocket fins
- Whitely (age 13)
Sidney Ohio
See also
One thing we should add to our previous remarks is that the fins should be toward the bottom of the rocket, for stability.
Mike W.
(published on 04/30/2012)
Follow-Up #5: Why air and water in bottle rocket?
- Gabriella (age 13)
We've marked this as a follow-up.
See also https://van.physics.illinois.edu/qa/listing.php?id=17080
Here's why you need to use a good part of the bottle for compressed air and a good part for the water. The compressed air provides the energy for the rocket. However, by itself it would just rush out the back heating up the nearby air and hardly pushing on the rocket. You need something heavy to push backwards, and that's where the water comes in. The reason you need something heavy is that a basic law says that the total "momentum" doesn't change. Here that means that the mass of the stuff going forward times its forward speed equals the mass of the stuff going backwards times its backwards speed. The water supplies the mass for the backward-going part.
Mike W.
(published on 05/02/2012)
Follow-Up #6: bottle rocket ideas
- Angie
We've marked this as a follow-up.
See also https://van.physics.illinois.edu/qa/listing.php?id=17080
https://van.physics.illinois.edu/qa/listing.php?id=17080
Mike W.
(published on 05/02/2012)
Follow-Up #7: bottle rocket pressure
- danielle (age 14)
sidney ohio united states
We've marked this as a follow-up.
See also https://van.physics.illinois.edu/qa/listing.php?id=17080
https://van.physics.illinois.edu/qa/listing.php?id=17080
Mike W.
(published on 05/03/2012)
Follow-Up #8: Bottle rockets: water or air?
- sally (age 11)
U.S.A
It turns out that you really need both water and air. As we've discussed in old answers (https://van.physics.illinois.edu/qa/listing.php?id=17080), about 1/3 of the bottle should be filled with water.
Mike W.
(published on 07/18/2012)
Follow-Up #9: filling bottle rockets
- Jacqueline (age 19)
Whoops, the link to our old discussion of this question were lost in the thread above.
Here it is: https://van.physics.illinois.edu/qa/listing.php?id=17080
https://van.physics.illinois.edu/qa/listing.php?id=17080
(published on 05/10/2018)