How does a reusable rocket land itself vertically?

A reusable rocket lands itself vertically by using special engines and smart controls, like a toy car that knows how to stop on its own.

Imagine you're playing with a toy car on a ramp. When you let it go, it zooms down the ramp and keeps moving forward, but if you want it to stop nicely, you press the brakes or maybe even steer it a bit. That’s kind of what happens with a rocket!

How It Works

When the rocket is coming back from space, it turns on special engines at the bottom, called thrusters, like little rockets that fire backward. These help slow the rocket down and guide it back to Earth.

The Landing

Once it’s close enough, the rocket uses smart controls, kind of like a remote control for a toy car, to make sure it lands straight up on its feet, just like when you land softly after jumping. This means the rocket doesn’t crash; instead, it lands gently and can be used again for another trip to space!

Take the quiz →

Examples

  1. A rocket uses its engines to slow down and land like a car parking in the sky.
  2. Imagine throwing a ball up and catching it, rockets do something similar but with fuel.
  3. The rocket turns around and lands on its feet, just like a dancer finishing a spin.

Ask a question

See also

Discussion

Recent activity