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From: Henry Spencer <henry@zoo.toronto.edu>
Newsgroups: sci.space.tech
Subject: Re: material density
Date: Fri, 3 Jan 1997 18:21:40 GMT
In article <Pine.A41.3.95b.970102173733.37798B-100000@dante14.u.washington.edu> John Parker Woods <jwoods@u.washington.edu> writes:
>Please tell me the density of ...
> liquid hydrogen
> LOX
> liquid nitrogen
You do realize, I trust, that these densities are functions of both
temperature and pressure? You need to be rather more specific about
conditions, especially for liquid hydrogen (which is quite compressible).
>or where can I find this and other material information
Sutton's "Rocket Propulsion Elements" is a good starting point for things
like this. Ditto the "Handbook of Chemistry and Physics", a standard
scientific reference book. For digging further, properties of the
cryogenic fluids in particular have been examined quite extensively by the
refrigeration people; for example, ASHRAE (American Society of Heating,
Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers) publishes "Thermophysical
Properties of Refrigerants" which includes data on a lot of things you'd
never think of as practical refrigerants.
--
"We don't care. We don't have to. You'll buy | Henry Spencer
whatever we ship, so why bother? We're Microsoft."| henry@zoo.toronto.edu
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