Newtons first second and third laws .
Newton's Laws do not prevent rockets from functioning in a vacuum, they
require them to function.
As explained before when one mass is accelerated one way, another mass moves must be accelerated the opposite way.
This is a basic law and it is easily observable that gas (which as a mass) is leaving the rocket; to do that it must accelerate.
If you wan't a rocket to fail in a vacumm
you must
dispute Newton's laws.
Joules law of free expansion of gas into a vacuum . No work is done therefore no force therefore no reaction therefore no acceleration .
Again, as explained before:
- No work is not the same as no force applied. If you hold a weight stationary with your arm extended (for fun, imagine a mug of beer), no work is done, as the object doesn't move; however upward and downward forces are applied - in this case they cancel each other out.
- Joule's law of free expansion does not apply, because it describes a completely different process.
You do not understand the principles behind these laws - these laws are not open to debate .
As repeatedly state, I do not question those laws.
Despite your constant (and unproven) claim to the contrary, however, I do understand the principles behind those laws.
That is why I feel the need to comment on your faulty application of these laws, which lead you to wrong conclusions.
They dictate the inability of a rocket engine to produce any force in a vacuum .
See above. They do not, quite the opposite.
All amply demonstrated in the videos where experimenters cannot even ignite rocket fuel in a vacuum .
The problem of igniting the fuel is a separate (chemical) one and the videos have shown, that it is possible.
The videos have also shown, that rockets work in a near vacuum. They would also show them working in a total vacuum.
That's hard to do in an experiment, luckily satellites in orbit (controlling their orbit with thrusters) prove that what Newton's Law describes is also working in reality.
You seem to be unable to differentiate between a rocket engine and a bomb.
For the sake of "starting a chemical reaction in a vacuum" I think it really doesn't matter that much.
Blocking the exhaust temporarily as in the videos does not turn a rocket into a bomb.
If you'd
really block the exhaust, e.g. welding it shut, that would likely turn it into a bomb.
So again ... it is you who is unable to correctly apply definitions.
You have however , excelled in your sophistry.
Thank you for the compliment, but I cannot accept it. While my reasoning is skillful, it is not deceptive.
Unfortunately I can't return it either. While your reasoning appears deceptive, it does not appear skillful to me.
iC
(Edited for typos and some phrasing.)