Specific Impulse Calculator
Compute specific impulse from thrust and mass flow rate, or find rocket engine thrust from Isp and propellant consumption.
๐ What is Specific Impulse?
Specific impulse (Isp) is the universal measure of rocket engine propellant efficiency, expressed in seconds. Formally, it is the ratio of thrust produced to the weight flow rate of propellant consumed: Isp = F / (m-dot x g0), where F is thrust in newtons, m-dot is the mass flow rate in kg/s, and g0 = 9.80665 m/s squared is standard gravitational acceleration. A higher Isp means the engine generates more thrust for every kilogram of propellant burned each second, translating directly into more mission performance for a given propellant load.
The practical importance of specific impulse comes from its role as the direct multiplier in the Tsiolkovsky rocket equation, delta-v = Isp x g0 x ln(m0/mf). Increasing Isp by 5% increases achievable delta-v by 5% for the same propellant mass fraction. For a mission to low Earth orbit requiring 9,200 m/s of delta-v, improving Isp from 311 s (LOX/kerosene) to 450 s (LOX/hydrogen) reduces the required propellant mass fraction from 95% to 87%, unlocking hundreds of kilograms of additional payload capacity. This is why propulsion engineers work so hard to maximize Isp from their propellant combinations.
Isp is measured in seconds to remain consistent across unit systems. In SI units, thrust in newtons divided by mass flow in kg/s times g0 in m/s squared yields seconds, which is the same number regardless of whether you work in metric or imperial. This makes Isp the standard currency for comparing propulsion systems across countries and engineering traditions, from solid rocket boosters at 280 s to ion thrusters at 3,000 s or more.
Real-world Isp values vary enormously by propellant type and engine design. Solid rocket boosters achieve 250 to 300 s. Hypergolic storable propellants (NTO/MMH) reach 300 to 340 s. LOX/kerosene engines like the Merlin 1D achieve 311 s vacuum. LOX/methane engines like the Raptor reach 363 s vacuum. LOX/hydrogen engines like the RS-25 achieve 453 s vacuum. Ion and Hall thrusters reach 1,500 to 10,000 s at the cost of very low thrust. Each propulsion class serves a distinct role: high-Isp electric thrusters excel at deep-space cruise, while chemical engines provide the thrust-to-weight ratio needed to lift payloads from planetary surfaces.
This calculator solves two complementary problems. The Isp Calculator mode determines engine efficiency from a static test measurement: given thrust and propellant mass flow rate, it returns Isp and exhaust velocity. The Thrust Calculator mode works in reverse: given a target Isp from propellant tables and a planned flow rate, it predicts the thrust your engine should produce. Both are essential for propulsion engineering analysis, from preliminary motor sizing to post-test performance verification.