Dubai Telegraph - What happens when fire ignites in space? 'A ball of flame'

EUR -
AED 4.396731
AFN 77.817676
ALL 96.633692
AMD 453.329176
ANG 2.143089
AOA 1097.83457
ARS 1729.352468
AUD 1.702011
AWG 2.156462
AZN 2.039423
BAM 1.955494
BBD 2.410093
BDT 146.224712
BGN 2.010547
BHD 0.451307
BIF 3544.601811
BMD 1.197203
BND 1.509945
BOB 8.268777
BRL 6.222465
BSD 1.196598
BTN 109.914828
BWP 15.657488
BYN 3.402326
BYR 23465.178004
BZD 2.406644
CAD 1.621444
CDF 2681.734654
CHF 0.916602
CLF 0.026164
CLP 1033.114564
CNY 8.326128
CNH 8.30948
COP 4394.165854
CRC 593.899773
CUC 1.197203
CUP 31.725878
CVE 110.246395
CZK 24.298668
DJF 212.767411
DKK 7.466817
DOP 75.287294
DZD 154.645006
EGP 56.071477
ERN 17.958044
ETB 186.070884
FJD 2.623191
FKP 0.868725
GBP 0.866422
GEL 3.226409
GGP 0.868725
GHS 13.079066
GIP 0.868725
GMD 87.39575
GNF 10500.227976
GTQ 9.180412
GYD 250.349842
HKD 9.339919
HNL 31.578671
HRK 7.53436
HTG 156.703555
HUF 380.275952
IDR 20043.152925
ILS 3.708785
IMP 0.868725
INR 110.191817
IQD 1567.535462
IRR 50432.174852
ISK 144.777925
JEP 0.868725
JMD 187.578344
JOD 0.848805
JPY 183.289346
KES 154.4388
KGS 104.695501
KHR 4810.248488
KMF 493.247274
KPW 1077.413043
KRW 1709.522081
KWD 0.366883
KYD 0.997244
KZT 602.915806
LAK 25780.187663
LBP 107157.553697
LKR 370.52747
LRD 221.375414
LSL 19.02661
LTL 3.535029
LVL 0.724176
LYD 7.514732
MAD 10.819274
MDL 20.066865
MGA 5339.210445
MKD 61.63438
MMK 2514.103837
MNT 4277.177094
MOP 9.616778
MRU 47.767939
MUR 53.981893
MVR 18.508609
MWK 2074.975824
MXN 20.55437
MYR 4.691876
MZN 76.333354
NAD 19.026689
NGN 1669.451383
NIO 44.033121
NOK 11.46487
NPR 175.861322
NZD 1.977324
OMR 0.46032
PAB 1.196623
PEN 4.003841
PGK 5.122136
PHP 70.371645
PKR 334.748308
PLN 4.205343
PYG 8035.6439
QAR 4.35082
RON 5.095894
RSD 117.401305
RUB 91.634445
RWF 1745.827247
SAR 4.489949
SBD 9.670618
SCR 16.465834
SDG 720.117452
SEK 10.562347
SGD 1.510601
SHP 0.898212
SLE 29.090341
SLL 25104.746579
SOS 682.68479
SRD 45.603892
STD 24779.684116
STN 24.495866
SVC 10.470233
SYP 13240.555793
SZL 19.01879
THB 37.293058
TJS 11.182306
TMT 4.19021
TND 3.422165
TOP 2.882577
TRY 51.974413
TTD 8.121799
TWD 37.457606
TZS 3064.839423
UAH 51.150068
UGX 4284.276983
USD 1.197203
UYU 45.282358
UZS 14477.556759
VES 429.168708
VND 31205.095136
VUV 143.270697
WST 3.262808
XAF 655.846319
XAG 0.010177
XAU 0.000217
XCD 3.235501
XCG 2.156536
XDR 0.81435
XOF 655.84358
XPF 119.331742
YER 285.40063
ZAR 18.820276
ZMK 10776.267075
ZMW 23.782483
ZWL 385.498864
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    82.4

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    23.7

    -0.42%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5500

    16.6

    -3.31%

  • CMSD

    -0.0457

    24.0508

    -0.19%

  • BTI

    -0.1800

    60.16

    -0.3%

  • BCC

    -0.8900

    80.85

    -1.1%

  • GSK

    -0.7000

    50.1

    -1.4%

  • NGG

    0.3700

    84.68

    +0.44%

  • BCE

    -0.2500

    25.27

    -0.99%

  • RIO

    0.4600

    93.37

    +0.49%

  • RELX

    -0.9800

    37.38

    -2.62%

  • BP

    0.0800

    37.7

    +0.21%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    14.57

    +0.48%

  • AZN

    -2.3800

    93.22

    -2.55%

  • JRI

    -0.6900

    12.99

    -5.31%

What happens when fire ignites in space? 'A ball of flame'
What happens when fire ignites in space? 'A ball of flame' / Photo: HO - NASA/AFP/File

What happens when fire ignites in space? 'A ball of flame'

When fire breaks out in the low-gravity, high-stakes conditions inside spacecraft or space stations, it behaves very differently than back here on Earth.

Text size:

So, as humans aim to set foot on Mars in the coming decades, researchers are seeking to learn how flames spark and spread in space -- and how best to stamp them out.

The deadly threat fire poses in space goes all the way back to the first mission of NASA's Apollo programme, which would go on to put the first humans on the Moon.

Just days before the Apollo 1 mission was scheduled to launch in January 1967, its three crew members were killed by a fire that broke out in the spacecraft's cabin during a training exercise on the ground.

"At that time, the capsules were filled with 100 percent pure oxygen at low pressure, instead of atmospheric pressure, so the astronauts could breathe," explained Serge Bourbigot, a researcher at France's Centrale Lille institute.

"However the more oxygen you have, the more it burns," he told AFP.

Since the Apollo 1 disaster, the oxygen levels in spacecraft carrying astronauts have been set to 21 percent -- the same amount as here on Earth.

But fire still acts differently in these cramped conditions hurtling through the vastness of space.

- A spherical flame -

When you light a candle on Earth, the heat rises because hot air is less dense than cold air.

However if you lit that candle inside a spacecraft or a station orbiting our planet, the heat would stay put because of the lack of gravity.

So instead of seeing a feather-shaped plume rise from the candle's wick, "you get a ball of flame," Bourbigot said.

"This ball will create and radiate heat, sending heat into the local environment -- the fire will spread that way," expanding in every direction, he added.

To find out more, Bourbigot and three other scientists have been awarded a grant from the European Research Council.

Their work has proved particularly timely because NASA recently recommended that oxygen levels be increased to 35 percent in new spacecraft and space stations, mainly to cut costs.

"With 35 percent oxygen, less pressure is needed inside the spacecraft, so the structure can be lighter," Bourbigot explained.

Heavier spacecraft require bigger rockets to launch them into space, making them more expensive.

But when oxygen levels rise, so does the risk of fire. So the grantees are investigating different ways to track and stamp out any space blazes in the future.

- Lighting a fire on a rocket -

Guillaume Legros of France's Sorbonne University is trying to use acoustic waves to smother the flames.

Tests have already been carried out on parabolic flights, which simulate the weightless conditions of space for 22 seconds.

Bourbigot is meanwhile looking into flame retardants. While these chemicals work well here on Earth, low gravity again throws up new hurdles.

Because smoke does not rise in the same way, it is more dense and "poses an opacity problem", Bourbigot said.

Florian Meyer from Germany's University of Bremen is developing sensors to closely monitor temperatures and track how fires would spread in space.

And fire safety researcher Bart Merci from Belgium's Ghent University is planning to digitally simulate how flames behave in low gravity.

To test their theories, a rocket is planned to launch within the next four years that will provide six minutes of microgravity to investigate how fire behaves in these conditions.

European aerospace manufacturer Airbus will build the rocket, which is set to launch from northern Sweden.

For their research, which is grouped under the Firespace programme, the four scientists have received 14 million euros ($16 million) -- enough to fund their work for the next six years.

D.Naveed--DT