Rockets can use different types of fuel within their 'propulsion systems' to produce thrust, and one important fuel is hydrogen. Hydrogen fuel contains a large amount of energy.
Hydrogen is a gas at the temperature and pressure inside the room you are sitting in, but if it is cooled down and pressed very hard (compressed) it can become a liquid. Liquids usually take up less space than gases, and so inside rockets, hydrogen fuel is stored in liquid form.
When a rocket is ready to be launched 'ignition' takes place. This is when the fuel is set alight, and allowed to burn. The burning involves a reaction with oxygen ('oxidation') which releases a huge amount of energy, and this pushes exhaust gases out of the tail end of the rocket down towards the Earth at very high speeds. These fast-moving exhaust gases propel the rocket off the ground.
Help with the above questions can be found at the BBC Bitesize Chemical Concepts page!
1. Sankey diagrams are diagrams that can be used to represent energy changes like the change that occurs when rocket fuel burns. The width of arrows in the diagram is roughly proportional to the amount of energy of a particular sort, so the thicker the arrow, the more energy it represents. Drag the labels to the Sankey diagram below, so that it shows the energy changes when a rocket is launched.
100 000kJ of chemical energy in fuel is converted to 60 000kJ kinetic energy at rocket launch, plus 15 000kJ light energy and 25 000kJ heat energy