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Lesson 1

Why Is Space So Expensive?

A beginner-friendly explanation of Earth's gravity well, why orbit is difficult, and why rockets are mostly propellant.

3-second outcome

Users understand that getting to space is not just going up; it is gaining enough sideways speed to stay in orbit.

Orbit is not just altitude

A rocket does need to climb, but orbit is mostly about speed. To stay in orbit around Earth, a spacecraft has to move sideways so fast that it keeps falling around the planet instead of falling back down.

That is why launch vehicles spend so much energy accelerating horizontally after liftoff. The hard part is not touching space for a moment; the hard part is staying there.

Key idea: Space begins high above Earth, but orbit is achieved through sideways velocity.

EarthOrbit is sideways speednot simply height

The rocket carries its own mountain

Aircraft can use oxygen from the air. Rockets cannot. They must carry both fuel and oxidizer, plus tanks, engines, structure, and payload.

Most of a launch vehicle's mass at liftoff is propellant. The rocket is expensive because it has to throw away or recover a huge machine after using enormous energy for just a few minutes.

Key idea: Rockets are mostly propellant because they must bring everything needed to accelerate in vacuum.

PayloadStructurePropellantmost of the mass

Checkpoint

What is the most important difference between reaching space and reaching orbit?