Russia–Soviet Union The idea of a liquid-fueled rocket as understood in the modern context first appeared in 1903 in the book
Exploration of the Universe with Rocket-Propelled Vehicles by the Russian rocket scientist
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky. The magnitude of his contribution to
astronautics is astounding, including the
Tsiolkovsky rocket equation, multi-staged rockets, and using liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen in liquid propellant rockets. Tsiolkovsky influenced later rocket scientists throughout Europe, like
Wernher von Braun. Soviet search teams at
Peenemünde found a German translation of a book by Tsiolkovsky of which "almost every page...was embellished by von Braun's comments and notes." Leading Soviet rocket-engine designer
Valentin Glushko and rocket designer
Sergey Korolev studied Tsiolkovsky's works as youths and both sought to turn Tsiolkovsky's theories into reality. From 1929 to 1930 in
Leningrad Glushko pursued rocket research at the
Gas Dynamics Laboratory (GDL), where a new research section was set up for the study of liquid-propellant and
electric rocket engines. This resulted in the creation of ORM (from "Experimental Rocket Motor" in Russian) engines to . A total of 100 bench tests of liquid-propellant rockets were conducted using various types of fuel, both low and high-boiling and thrust up to 300 kg was achieved. In January 1933 Tsander began development of the GIRD-X rocket. This design burned liquid oxygen and gasoline and was one of the first engines to be regeneratively cooled by the liquid oxygen, which flowed around the inner wall of the combustion chamber before entering it. Problems with burn-through during testing prompted a switch from gasoline to less energetic alcohol. The final missile, long by in diameter, had a mass of , and it was anticipated that it could carry a payload to an altitude of . The GIRD X rocket was launched on 25 November 1933 and flew to a height of 80 meters. In 1933 GDL and GIRD merged and became the
Reactive Scientific Research Institute (RNII). At RNII Gushko continued the development of liquid propellant rocket engines ОРМ-53 to ОРМ-102, with powering the
RP-318 rocket-powered aircraft. At RNII Tikhonravov worked on developing oxygen/alcohol liquid-propellant rocket engines. Ultimately liquid propellant rocket engines were given a low priority during the late 1930s at RNII, however the research was productive and very important for later achievements of the Soviet rocket program.
Peru 's
Avion Torpedo of 1902, featuring a
canopy fixed to a
delta tiltwing for horizontal or vertical flight. Peruvian
Pedro Paulet, who had experimented with rockets throughout his life in
Peru, wrote a letter to
El Comercio in
Lima in 1927, claiming he had experimented with a liquid rocket engine while he was a student in Paris three decades earlier. Historians of early rocketry experiments, among them
Max Valier,
Willy Ley, and
John D. Clark, have given differing amounts of credence to Paulet's report. Valier applauded Paulet's liquid-propelled rocket design in the Verein für Raumschiffahrt publication
Die Rakete, saying the engine had "amazing power" and that his plans were necessary for future rocket development.
Hermann Oberth would name Paulet as a pioneer in rocketry in 1965.
Wernher von Braun would also describe Paulet as "the pioneer of the liquid fuel propulsion motor" and stated that "Paulet helped
man reach the Moon". Paulet was later approached by
Nazi Germany, being invited to join the
Astronomische Gesellschaft to help develop rocket technology, though he refused to assist after discovering that the project was destined for weaponization and never shared the formula for his propellant.
United States , bundled against the cold
New England weather of March 16, 1926, holds the launching frame of his most notable invention — the first liquid rocket.The first
flight of a liquid-propellant rocket took place on March 16, 1926 at
Auburn, Massachusetts, when American professor Dr.
Robert H. Goddard launched a vehicle using
liquid oxygen and gasoline as propellants. The rocket, which was dubbed "Nell", rose just 41 feet during a 2.5-second flight that ended in a cabbage field, but it was an important demonstration that rockets using liquid propulsion were possible. Goddard proposed liquid propellants about fifteen years earlier and began to seriously experiment with them in 1921. The German-Romanian
Hermann Oberth published a book in 1923 suggesting the use of liquid propellants.
Germany In Germany, engineers and scientists became enthralled with liquid propulsion, building and testing them in the late 1920s within
Opel RAK, the world's first rocket program, in Rüsselsheim. According to
Max Valier's account, Opel RAK rocket designer,
Friedrich Wilhelm Sander launched two liquid-fuel rockets at Opel Rennbahn in
Rüsselsheim on April 10 and April 12, 1929. These Opel RAK rockets have been the first European, and after Goddard the world's second, liquid-fuel rockets in history. In his book "Raketenfahrt" Valier describes the size of the rockets as of 21 cm in diameter and with a length of 74 cm, weighing 7 kg empty and 16 kg with fuel. The maximum thrust was 45 to 50 kp, with a total burning time of 132 seconds. These properties indicate a gas pressure pumping. The main purpose of these tests was to develop the liquid rocket-propulsion system for a Gebrüder-Müller-Griessheim aircraft under construction for a planned flight across the English channel. Also spaceflight historian
Frank H. Winter, curator at National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC, confirms the Opel group was working, in addition to their solid-fuel rockets used for land-speed records and the world's first crewed rocket-plane flights with the
Opel RAK.1, on liquid-fuel rockets. By May 1929, the engine produced a thrust of 200 kg (440 lb.) "for longer than fifteen minutes and in July 1929, the Opel RAK collaborators were able to attain powered phases of more than thirty minutes for thrusts of 300 kg (660-lb.) at Opel's works in Rüsselsheim," again according to Max Valier's account. The Great Depression brought an end to the Opel RAK activities. After working for the German military in the early 1930s, Sander was arrested by Gestapo in 1935, when private rocket-engineering became forbidden in Germany. He was convicted of treason to 5 years in prison and forced to sell his company, he died in 1938. Max Valier's (via
Arthur Rudolph and Heylandt), who died while experimenting in 1930, and Friedrich Sander's work on liquid-fuel rockets was confiscated by the German military, the
Heereswaffenamt and integrated into the activities under General
Walter Dornberger in the early and mid-1930s in
a field near Berlin. Max Valier was a co-founder of an amateur research group, the
VfR, working on liquid rockets in the early 1930s, and many of whose members eventually became important rocket technology pioneers, including
Wernher von Braun. Von Braun served as head of the army research station that designed the
V-2 rocket weapon for the Nazis. By the late 1930s, use of rocket propulsion for crewed flight began to be seriously experimented with, as Germany's
Heinkel He 176 made the first crewed rocket-powered flight using a liquid rocket engine, designed by German aeronautics engineer
Hellmuth Walter on June 20, 1939. The only production rocket-powered combat aircraft ever to see military service, the
Me 163 Komet in 1944-45, also used a Walter-designed liquid rocket engine, the
Walter HWK 109-509, which produced up to 1,700 kgf (16.7 kN) thrust at full power.
Post World War II After World War II the American government and military finally seriously considered liquid-propellant rockets as weapons and began to fund work on them. The Soviet Union did likewise, and thus began the
Space Race. In 2010s
3D printed engines started being used for spaceflight. Examples of such engines include
SuperDraco used in
launch escape system of the
SpaceX Dragon 2 and also engines used for first or second stages in
launch vehicles from
Astra,
Orbex,
Relativity Space,
Skyrora, or Launcher. ==See also==