Tremendous accomplishment! Congratulations to the whole team at USC.🎉 It gives me hope to see the next generation taking on challenges and breaking records. Would love to know something more about their propellant composition, Isp and total newtons. (they did say it was the largest non-commercial motor, but the all up weight doesn't seem to reflect that)
@allan6402 күн бұрын
Where did the nose land at? Obviously from the footage you were able to retrieve it. Or had some excellent wirless transmitters in that it😅
@HikariSakai3 күн бұрын
Can you upload the full raw footage of the crafts pov so we can disprove these flat earthers
@allan6402 күн бұрын
Oooh no don't do that, I need some entertainment
@HikariSakai2 күн бұрын
@@allan640 lol but my dad wont stop trying to convince me the world is flat and its driving my ass crazy lol
@MoniqueCBaisden3 күн бұрын
This is so incredibly dope! Congrats on this phenomenal acoomplishment!
@SmartFX7773 күн бұрын
солнце увидело и конец видео?
@Anonymous-lw1zy4 күн бұрын
Super impressive!!! Congratulations!!!
@wesgregg64514 күн бұрын
Attained an altitude of a tick over 89 miles - just 11 miles more and it would have been high enough to technically be in orbit (if it were circling the planet). Pretty amazing for "amateurs." Kind of a shame that at least one member of that team is heading to SpaceX. It would have been nice to have been able to read that they were all going to work at NASA. Or, failing that, at least SpaceX's competition.
@Illuminati24 күн бұрын
fye
@trentmason0094 күн бұрын
Now, if we only can get people to understand that FARther is the word they are looking for.
@michaelcassidy40954 күн бұрын
Flat earthers are still gonna deny a curve tho...
@loliconer3 күн бұрын
the curvature here is only in your iq
@GerdKnops4 күн бұрын
"Farther". Not "Further".
@olddoc14 күн бұрын
Congratulations on an amazing achievement!
@tylerwickwire15225 күн бұрын
This kid needs to work for SpaceX
@kaleb42614 күн бұрын
Apparently some of them are already heading there
@kevindavis8835 күн бұрын
Good job you guys
@richlo88875 күн бұрын
This amateur rocket went further up than Blu Origin's New Sheppard rocket. 🤣
@richlo88875 күн бұрын
Even this amateur rocket is better than SLS! 🤣🤣
@distimpson5 күн бұрын
every model rocket builders dream, well done
@amandahawkins875 күн бұрын
This is AN AMAZING ACHIEVEMENT! CONGRATS STUDENTS 🎉🎉🎉🎉 Elon will be calling soon after seeing this lol
@A913675 күн бұрын
Let me guess: there will be no full video released to public 😂
@thegameroptimus1404 күн бұрын
It is you just need to use your tinfoil brain and search that video🤡
@loliconer3 күн бұрын
@@thegameroptimus140 he will ask your mom for the full video when he visits her at night
@CMAenergy5 күн бұрын
So they beat a record, But what good was it is if there was nothing scientific that it could be used for, Except that the rest of the world has already done that, and what we ask is someone trying to reinvent the wheel ? All they did was improve a mechanical system, Rockets and missiles are actually an archaic mode of transportation, Where science has gone off the track and where they threw out God for most of society around the world, If they had not done so, Man would have been taught how to make an antigravity system, AND FOR YOU DUMMIES WHO DO NOT UNDERSTAND THE TRUE MEANING OF GOD GOD STANDS FOR LOVE AND NOT JUST TO GET AS THIS WORLD TEACHES YOU ALL A BUNCH OF EGOTISTICAL ETC'S
@paulbaker64585 күн бұрын
What type of camera and lens was used?
@danpolk5 күн бұрын
The annoying music obscures the amazing rocket engine sound.
@-2ool5 күн бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/mYvIppSPaK2If9E
@roadstarunlimited79315 күн бұрын
Why does the Earth still appear artificial? Is there no complete video available that captures the final destination before descent?
@akiraic5 күн бұрын
build your own and take a selfie!
@andywilson58285 күн бұрын
Thanks guys for prooving almost every flerf theory wrong in one take off. 😊
@roadstarunlimited79315 күн бұрын
@@akiraic I already did, and I didn't show it like they didn't show it.
@akiraic5 күн бұрын
@@roadstarunlimited7931 of course you did 😂 but jokes aside, you should check the red bull atmospheric jump, pretty cool view. And by the way, Earth does look artificial, the same way other planets do when you look at them with a telescope. It's simply completely different from what we are used to.
@Theoblade016 күн бұрын
Very cool stuff. I wonder how far the nosecone landed from the launch site.
@berserkerusmc76136 күн бұрын
Great achievement! Now , follow that with a video that doesn't tell the story with huge text that blocks all the cool footage.
@richlo88875 күн бұрын
Keep crying, snowflake. 🤡
@Illuminati24 күн бұрын
bro relax damn
@berserkerusmc76133 күн бұрын
@Illuminati2 That's me relaxed.
@Barbixas_pt3 күн бұрын
@@Illuminati2 He is right you know! Also the music doesn't let you hear the roar of the rocket engine, very anti-climatic!!
@PhotoXpression16 күн бұрын
These students are smarter than the whole flat-earth community combined!
@bereabeard5 күн бұрын
Most goldfish are as well! 😆
@loliconer3 күн бұрын
every flat earther has about a hundred times more convolutions in his head than you
@DanielSMatthews3 күн бұрын
Not at all, the flat Earthers are just trolls, and they fooled you into thinking that they really believe what they claim. The point of the exercise is to live in your head rent free, which clearly they are.
@jaybee70756 күн бұрын
Great rocket, but I do question the homemade part however🫤
@Bigern29986 күн бұрын
Lol! Yeah, completely made with items just sitting around the average home.
@thetruthhurts33166 күн бұрын
Elon Musk has entered the chat.......
@dennissharpe83566 күн бұрын
And still, the earth shows no sign of curvature? At what altitude is the earrh curvature able to be observed? Well, Google says 36,000 feet, so going more than 13 times that altitude, you would think we would be able to see a curve exponentially larger than that observed at 36,000 feet? So, why don't we see it? If these lies, why did the encyclopedias still report the world as flat until the 20th century. If Galileo or Aristotle could prove the earth was round in 350 BC, then why did Encyclopedias still report it flat until just over 90 years ago? I just want the truth. I doubt anyone is ever gonna give it without having some cocky snide omments.
@thorsmith596 күн бұрын
Awesome!
@cronoscoin4176 күн бұрын
Full video?
@-2ool5 күн бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/mYvIppSPaK2If9E
@peterkrause51876 күн бұрын
Take that Flat and Level Earth Observers!!!!! Well done guys!
@reaper_taco5 күн бұрын
Looked pretty flat to me.
@peterkrause51875 күн бұрын
@@reaper_taco😂😂😂😂😂
@loliconer3 күн бұрын
@@reaper_taco this is all probably because he is flat
@CraigCholar6 күн бұрын
Congratulations on your terrific achievement! Suggestion: To get more clicks please use a thumbnail that adds "and you won't believe what happened next!" to the title. Also add a big fat red arrow pointing to something (anything, really), and include someone's cartoonishly-astonished, mouth-agape face in the lower right corner, hands pressing against cheeks. For extra credit, use an AI-generated image of an enormous 4-stage rocket festooned with Buck Rogers-style curving, pointy fins. You're welcome.
@Illuminati24 күн бұрын
shut up unc
@ne8r6 күн бұрын
Future SpaceX employees.
@kevinjensen98036 күн бұрын
Fabulous rocketry - congratulations!
@douxreveur1317 күн бұрын
Félicitations :)
@Viperwon7 күн бұрын
So sick. Where any parts 3d printed?
@dumbcat8 күн бұрын
do it again without the fish eye distortion. let people see what the world really looks like
@Teeb20237 күн бұрын
We already know, and it isn't flat. We've known this for millennia.
@muzikgod7 күн бұрын
You deny all evidence that goes against your fantasy world, and troll elsewhere.
@ahsookee6 күн бұрын
you already told this to an engineer on the team and they already told you that this is a linear lens without postprocessing.
@aidanpryde77206 күн бұрын
lmao. Look up 56 Miles (90 km) Above Earth - Successful Amateur Rocket Launch by Kip Daugirdas. or are you going to deny that its real like all flerfs? No fish eye.
@Native_Creation6 күн бұрын
You can take a high altitude trip and see for yourself
@WeSwapVoices8 күн бұрын
Incredible work. Really inspiring.
@systemofcontrol53698 күн бұрын
ae
@warrenbaker41248 күн бұрын
Wow!! Fantastic work!! This may be a crazy question (I'm ignorant. . .) but, next could you get a rocket to the moon? It seems like you only need the propellant to escape Earth's gravity and then maybe you could use an ionic system? Either way, this is an amazing feat - I can't imagine how much work this took. Congratulations!!
@victoriajackson83614 күн бұрын
Guidance system....
@Illuminati24 күн бұрын
they did not escape earths gravity in this video, they didn't even come close. In order to escape the Earths gravity, the rocket must be travelling at about 11.2 km/s, and the peak speed of their rocket is likely a fraction of that, so in order to send a rocket to the moon they would need a ton of propellant, and more propellant to lift all that extra fuel too. Its super hard! But what they did here is impressive regardless.
@TheRealJeffDiamond2 күн бұрын
They were an order of magnitude off from escaping, hence the immediate fall back to Earth. They were traveling a bit over 4,000 mph. Just to maintain low earth orbit requires a horizontal velocity of 18,000 mph. Escaping Earth requires 25,000 mph. The current record for the smallest rocket to achieve low earth orbit was the Japanese SS-520-5, which weighed 3 tons - about 20x larger. :( I, too, dream of a hobby rocket reaching the moon. :) Maybe someday with increased fuel density,
@TheRealJeffDiamond2 күн бұрын
Just for fun I looked up the stats on the Saturn V. The Aftershock 2 burned for 12 seconds - at an impressive 15+ Gs! The Saturn V had stage 1 burn for almost 3 minutes to get the Saturn V to an altitude of just 58 miles. Stage 2 burned for 8 minutes, reaching 25K mph. Then stage 3 burned for 2.5 minutes to achieve Earth orbit @ 120 miles high, then another 6 minutes burn to start its 3 day journey to the moon.
@Orysbai8 күн бұрын
These guys are a long way from Ilon Musk. To be like Musk they have to be always visible and stay on social media. They can't even make videos of their accomplishments). Good for them though!
@aidanpryde77206 күн бұрын
LMFAO omfg your brain ROT is real. also, his name is ELON. And the difference is, these are REAL rocket engineers, not a social media poser. MUSK employs Rocket scientist and rocket engineers, he himself IS NOT ONE.
@Native_Creation6 күн бұрын
One (or some) of the team are already slated to work at SpaceX. Elon didn't build the rockets on his own.
@amandahawkins875 күн бұрын
ELON, NOT Ill-on lol employs rocket scientists at space x, he doesn't build or engineer the rockets or spacecraft himself
@loliconer3 күн бұрын
and receive 5,000,000,000 a year from the US government for their failed underdeveloped projects as mask
@LeftySurvival8 күн бұрын
The music is incredibly annoying! Talk about trying to take focus away from the subject matter. Downvote!!!!
@Zuul889 күн бұрын
Congrats! But as a scientific organisation, please use SI units :D
@ChadCarney-hu3du8 күн бұрын
SI units didn't put a man on the moon🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
@DCRiggs878 күн бұрын
International aviation unit for atmospheric altitude are in feet, not meters. This promotes a greater understanding of the altitude gained more so than “meters,” which means nothing to the common aviation world outside of communist countries such as Russia and China…
@shivshankark8 күн бұрын
@@ChadCarney-hu3du i believe the hollywood did 😀
@asdfghjklqzwx8 күн бұрын
@@ChadCarney-hu3du Pretty sure NASA used SI
@roganthoerson19097 күн бұрын
@@ChadCarney-hu3duWho was head of NASA at the time ? if you wiki the Saturn V you find a lot of numbers like diameter of the rocket with round numbers in meters... The fun fact is that mixing SI and imperial units generated some issues in other missions. US missed mars orbit by using imperial system ;)
@Einarmiger_H759 күн бұрын
YEAH!!!
@louissivo96609 күн бұрын
Bravo!
@philippklaus68829 күн бұрын
What a superb achievemnt and what a shitty video.
@OhMyGeekNET9 күн бұрын
Kudos! 🚀
@TheButterZone10 күн бұрын
Hope you make it on This Week In Spaceflight!
@ianglenn282110 күн бұрын
143 km, very nice, higher than the altitude where rockets usually do staging