Rocket fuel, that is, the fuel of rocket thrusters, includes CO, H2, C2H2, CH4, C2H4, CH3CH2OH, N2H4, and high-grade borosilianes (these are all fuels for rocket thrusters). It's the same as the ignition principle of firecrackers, except that the upper layer is not gunpowder, but a rocket head (inside are satellites, escape capsules, probes and the like). The rocket fuel commonly used to launch satellites (spacecraft) should be small in size and light in weight, but the heat emitted should be large, so as to reduce the weight of the rocket and enable the satellite (spacecraft) to be quickly put into orbit. Liquid (solid) fuels emit a lot of energy and produce a lot of thrust; Moreover, this type of fuel is relatively easy to control and takes a long time to burn. As a result, most of the rockets used to launch satellites (spacecraft) use liquid (solid) fuel.
Principle
Aviation kerosene is colorless and transparent, smells no different from ordinary kerosene, an