Abstract

This paper presents a model for the steady heating of flowing hydrogen by a CW 10.6 micron laser, to consider the feasibility of a laser-heated rocket. The hydrogen flow and the laser beam are parallel, and move into a converging-diverging nozzle. The absorption of laser energy is initiated by a laser-supported combustion wave. The hydrogen is in chemical equilibrium, absorbs laser energy by inverse Bremsstrahlung, and loses energy by radiation. The hydrogen flow was calculated from the rear of the LSC wave to the throat. Estimates of convective heat losses were made using a hydrogen boundary layer analysis. Specific impulse, obtained by expanding isentropically from the throat to 1 atm or a vacuum, varies from 1400 to 3000 s. Radiation losses are 5 to 20%, though the energy fluxes to the walls are quite high. Convective loss estimates are high enough to indicate that coupling to the hot gas flow is required for a 10 kW engine, but not for a 5 MW engine.

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