Want this question answered?
The most important parts of a rocket are the payload (what the rocket is carrying), the propulsion system (engines and fuel), the guidance system (to control the rocket's flight path), and the structural components (body, fins, and nose cone) that hold everything together and provide stability.
The top part of a rocket is called the payload or the payload fairing. This is the section that carries the spacecraft or satellite into orbit.
The tip of a rocket is called the nose cone. It is designed to reduce aerodynamic drag and protect the payload during flight.
Rockets have pointed noses to reduce air resistance as they travel through the Earth's atmosphere during launch. The pointed shape helps to minimize drag and allows the rocket to move more efficiently through the air, ultimately increasing its speed and reducing fuel consumption.
A good balance of propulsion and weight, and make sure that it has a good aerodynamic structure, because sometimes the nose of a rocket tends to be in a shape that creates more wind resistance.
The forward most, usually separable section of a rocket or guided missile that is shaped to offer minimum aerodynamic resistance
a rocket does not have a nose.......
A standard chemical rocket, same as used to launch satellites, with a nuclear warhead in its nose cone, instead of a satellite. Simple isn't it?
It streamlines the nose, so the rocket flies faster.
no
typically the nose cone is filled with a parachute to the rocket arrives on the ground safely.
It streamlines the rocket and allows more speed.
"Rocket nose cone" pretty much says it all, I really don't think there is another suitable name.
It streamlines the nose.
nose cone
Yes, it helps the rocket to go faster.
If the nose is pointy, the rocket will go faster, but if the rocket's nose is flat, it will just travel slower in the lower atmosphere, the height a rocket attains depends on the efficiancy of its engines, the amount of propellant carried and the launch profile. However, for a subsonic rocket (which is what most hobby rockets are) then a curved on not a pointy one is much better. I would suggest looking it up on wikipedia.