All very good questions. Seems like every ounce must be painstakingly accounted for in order to create enough thrust for lift off. Why would all that excess be there in the first place, and why not keep it? And, is the rocket spinning like a top when it 'releases the excess fuel? Otherwise, how do you account for the spiral design.
https://apnews.com/article/alaska-sky-spiral-aurora-northern-lights-90e767058f328bb95bab62c3f5bed1cc
Nice try but the shedding of fuel took place elsewhere
https://files.catbox.moe/lilwkp.png
Seems like a lot of fuel. How much can it carry? Why do they launch with "excess fuel" ?
All very good questions. Seems like every ounce must be painstakingly accounted for in order to create enough thrust for lift off. Why would all that excess be there in the first place, and why not keep it? And, is the rocket spinning like a top when it 'releases the excess fuel? Otherwise, how do you account for the spiral design.
Seriously true. How big is that spiral, far left to right, top to bottom? I don't think they could get that much fuel up there.
It's actually the deployment of the Bearenstine Universe as created by the CERN facility at Lake Geneva.
What a time to be alive!