@freemo How to they react, when mixed up in liquid state like that?
Even without an ignition source, I would be curious to know.
@design_RG I would expect them to be stable, but im not sure. If you pour LOx on asphalt then it will explode if you step on it I hear. So I could be wrong.
@freemo It is a curious thing, really. The liquid qill be really cold, and that might inhibit it from starting a flame immediately when contacting a combustible material like the asphalt. But it's pure oxygen.
I have read a book on rocket fuels, and it was quite interesting. The amount of difficulties they experienced while looking for better ones, most were dangerous substances; poisonous, unstable, nasty things.
Great book, the author is a Chemistry professor and had a dark sense of humour.
@freemo Thank you for the graph, quite interesting.
And I was lucky on finding the book I mentioned -- my copy here is somewhere I can't locate (possibly on my dropbox ebooks folders) but... Bing knows.
FULL pdf text of "Ignition!" is here : https://library.sciencemadness.org/library/books/ignition.pdf
Teaser illustration from page 2!
@design_RG Now I want to know what the hell a "mach diamond" is!
@freemo me too. Wiki knows : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shock_diamond
@design_RG cccoooolllll! Man wave mechanics are everywhere. I love it
@freemo SR-71 in afterburner mode. Can't resist it.
A cropped, resized down version, full size at Wiki link above.
Mach diamond patterns on the exhaust plume.
@design_RG sooo cool, when i have a minute i have to learn the physics behind what causes this. I cant immediately see what the resonant properties would be that would give rise to this
@freemo ...and then, on page 3...