🔥 Aerospace · Thermodynamics
📅 March 2026 ⏱ 14 min read 🎓 Advanced

Re-entry Heat Shield Physics — Ablation, Plasma & Survival

When a spacecraft returns from orbit at 7.9 km/s, the air ahead cannot get out of the way fast enough. It compresses into a bow shock, reaching temperatures of 8 000–11 000 K — hotter than the Sun's surface. Understanding how heat shields survive this ordeal means understanding stagnation heating, ablation chemistry, and the paradox that a blunt nose is safer than a sharp one.

1. Hypersonic Regime & Mach Numbers

Flow regimes are classified by Mach number M = v/a, where a is the local speed of sound. For Earth's atmosphere at altitude, a ≈ 295 m/s at 30 km, ≈ 340 m/s at sea level.

Regime Mach range Typical example
Subsonic M < 0.8 Airliner cruise 0.82
Transonic 0.8–1.2 Sound barrier zone
Supersonic 1.2–5 Concorde, SR-71
Hypersonic 5–25 Space Shuttle, capsule re-entry
Orbital re-entry M ≈ 25–28 7.9 km/s from LEO; 11 km/s from Moon

Above Mach 5, several new effects dominate:

ISS orbital speed: 7.66 km/s = 27 576 km/h = Mach 23 at 400 km altitude. The kinetic energy of 1 kg at this speed is ½·(7660)² = 29.4 MJ — equivalent to 7 kg of TNT. All of that must be converted to heat, sound, and radiation during re-entry.

2. Bow Shock and Stagnation Point Temperature

At hypersonic speeds, a detached bow shock forms ahead of the vehicle. Across a normal shock the total enthalpy (stagnation enthalpy) is conserved. For a perfect gas:

h₀ = h + v²/2

T₀ = T∞ + v²/(2·cₚ)  (stagnation temperature)

At v = 7900 m/s, T∞ = 240 K (30 km):
T₀ = 240 + 7900²/(2·1005) ≈ 240 + 31 100 ≈ 31 340 K

Real gas T_stag ≈ 8 000–11 000 K (energy goes into dissociation, not temperature)

The enormous "loss" of temperature (31 000 K theoretical vs 11 000 K real) is actually good news: the energy that would have heated the gas is instead spent breaking molecular bonds — dissociating O₂ at ~5 eV/molecule and N₂ at ~9.8 eV/molecule. This is called the thermochemical energy sink.

Cold freestreamShock compressedStagnationBeyond Sun's surface temp

The stagnation point — the point on the vehicle's nose where flow velocity is zero — receives the highest heat flux. Even a fraction of a percent of this energy reaching the structure would be catastrophic without a heat shield.

3. Chapman's Stagnation Heating Formula

Detra, Kemp, and Riddell (1957) and Chapman (1958) derived semi-empirical formulas for the convective heat flux at the stagnation point. The Chapman (cold-wall) approximation in SI units:

q̇ = C · (ρ/ρ_sl)^0.5 · (v/v_c)^3 / R_n^0.5

where:
q̇ = heat flux [W/cm²]
ρ = local freestream density [kg/m³]
ρ_sl = sea-level density = 1.225 kg/m³
v = vehicle velocity [m/s]
v_c = circular orbital velocity ≈ 7905 m/s
R_n = nose radius [m]
C ≈ 18 470 W·s³/cm²·m·kg^0.5  (cold wall)

Key insights from this formula:

Apollo 11 peak heating: ~480 W/cm² for ~40 seconds. That is 4.8 MW/m². A household electric oven produces about 2 kW over 0.1 m² = 20 kW/m² — 240× less intense.

Radiative Heating

At super-orbital speeds (v > 10 km/s), the hot shock-layer gas radiates like a black body. For lunar return velocity ~11 km/s, radiative heating can exceed convective heating. The Tauber–Sutton approximation for radiative flux:

q̇_rad ∝ ρ^1.5 · v^8.5 · R_n^1.0

Note: R_n dependence is positive for radiation but negative for convection. An optimal nose radius minimises the sum q̇_conv + q̇_rad.

4. The Blunt Body Paradox

H. Julian Allen at NACA (1951) proved that a blunt nose survives re-entry better than a sharp one. This was counterintuitive — sharper objects create weaker shocks in supersonic flight (less drag). But blunt bodies have three advantages for re-entry:

Stand-off shock

A strong normal shock stands far ahead of the blunt nose. Most energy is deposited in the shock and radiated away from the vehicle — not into it.

Large R_n reduces q̇

Chapman's formula: q̇ ∝ 1/√R_n. Apollo's 4.7 m radius gives 3× lower peak heat flux than a 0.5 m radius nose.

High drag for deceleration

More drag = decelerates faster = spends less time at high velocity. This dramatically reduces total heat load (time-integrated).

Stable trim

Wide capsule shapes (Apollo, Orion, Soyuz) are aerodynamically stable at re-entry angles, reducing the need for active control.

Total heat load vs peak heat flux:
A steep re-entry (−15°) maximises drag and decelerates fast → high peak q̇ but short duration → lower total heat load.
A shallow re-entry (−5°) has lower peak q̇ but longer duration → same or higher total heat load. The design optimum depends on TPS specific heat capacity.

5. Ablative Heat Shields — How They Work

An ablative TPS intentionally sacrifices itself to protect the structure. The ablation process involves three simultaneous mechanisms:

Phase change and pyrolysis

As heat penetrates the ablator surface, organic binders pyrolyse (thermally decompose) at 300–500°C. This endothermic reaction absorbs heat: ~1–3 MJ/kg. The pyrolysis gases flow outward, providing a transpiration cooling effect (a thin cool layer between hot shock and hot surface).

Surface reactions

The remaining char (carbon matrix) reacts with the shock-layer gases. At temperatures above ~3000°C, carbon ablates by oxidation (C + O → CO, where available) and sublimation (C → C₂, C₃, etc.). Each reaction carries substantial latent energy away from the surface.

Radiation

The glowing char surface radiates energy back at T⁴ (black-body term). At 3000 K, emissive power = σT⁴ = 5.67e-8 × 3000⁴ ≈ 4.6 MW/m² — comparable to incoming flux during peak heating.

Heat balance at ablator surface (ṁ = ablation mass loss rate per area):

q̇_conv + q̇_rad_in = ṁ·H_eff + ε·σ·T_w⁴ + q̇_cond

H_eff = effective enthalpy of ablation [J/kg]
≈ H_pyrolysis + H_surface_rxn + H_transpiration (~10–30 MJ/kg)
q̇_cond = heat conducted into structure (the "leakage" we must minimise)
PICA heat-shield efficiency: Phoenix Mars lander used PICA (Phenolic Impregnated Carbon Ablator) developed by NASA Ames. Effective ablation enthalpy ≈ 40 000–50 000 kJ/kg. Density 0.27 g/cm³. Total mass lost during Mars EDL: ~30 kg from a 1.5 m diameter shield.

6. TPS Materials: Shuttle Tiles vs PICA vs AVCOAT

Material Type T_max (°C) Density (g/cm³) Usage
AVCOAT Ablative, honeycomb ~2800 0.51 Apollo CM, SLS Orion
PICA Ablative, low-density ~1650 0.27 Stardust, Phoenix, Dragon
PICA-X Ablative (SpaceX variant) >1650 ~0.25 SpaceX Dragon 2
HRSI (LI-900) Reusable RSI tiles 1260 0.144 Space Shuttle undersurface
FRSI Reusable, flexible blanket 371 Shuttle upper surface (low heat)
Reinforced Carbon-Carbon Structural, reusable 1650+ 1.5 Shuttle nose cap, leading edges
Starship TUFI Ceramic tiles (reusable) ~1650 SpaceX Starship

Space Shuttle TPS Architecture

The Space Shuttle used a zoned approach across its surface, each zone matched to the peak temperature predicted by aerothermal analysis:

Columbia disaster (STS-107, 2003): A foam strike during launch punched a 15–25 cm hole in the leading edge RCC of the left wing. During re-entry on 1 February 2003, plasma at ~1500°C entered the wing structure. Within 7 minutes, wing structural temperature exceeded 1600°C — above RCC melt point. The wing failed at Mach 18.4, 63 km altitude.

7. Re-entry Corridor and Ballistic Coefficient

Re-entry Corridor

The re-entry trajectory must thread a narrow corridor defined by:

Apollo corridor: −5.5° ± 1.5° flight path angle at 120 km entry interface. This narrow window (3° total) required precision navigation that would have been impossible without the onboard guidance computer.

Ballistic Coefficient

The ballistic coefficient β determines how deep into the atmosphere a vehicle penetrates before significant deceleration:

β = m / (C_D · A)   [kg/m²]

High β → dense, small → punches through atmosphere fast → steep deceleration curve → high peak g
Low β → large, light → decelerates high in thin atmosphere → lower peak g, lower Tmax

Apollo CM: β ≈ 390 kg/m²
Soyuz TMA: β ≈ 300 kg/m²
SpaceX Dragon: β ≈ 450 kg/m²
Mars Pathfinder: β ≈ 63 kg/m² (thin Mars air)

Integrated Heat Load

Peak heat flux tells you the TPS surface temperature requirement. The integrated heat load (J/cm²) tells you how much material you need:

Q_total = ∫ q̇(t) dt   [J/cm²]

Required ablator thickness ≈ Q_total / (ρ_ablator · H_eff)

Apollo CM: Q_total ≈ 30 000 J/cm² → AVCOAT thickness 5–7 cm

8. Radio Blackout and Plasma Sheath

At peak heating, the shock layer plasma is dense enough to attenuate or completely block radio communications. This is the re-entry communications blackout.

Physics of the Plasma Sheath

The shock-layer temperatures ionise air: N₂ + energy → N₂⁺ + e⁻; O₂ → O⁺ + e⁻. Electron density n_e around Apollo capsule peaked at ~10¹⁶ m⁻³. A radio wave can propagate through a plasma only if its frequency exceeds the plasma frequency:

f_p = (1/2π) · √(n_e · e² / (ε₀ · m_e))

n_e = 10¹⁶ m⁻³ → f_p ≈ 900 MHz (UHF range is blocked)
n_e = 10¹⁸ m⁻³ → f_p ≈ 9 GHz (X-band blocked — GPS, radar also blocked)

Duration and Mitigation

Mission Blackout start (altitude) Duration
Apollo ~90 km (Mach 18) ~4 minutes
Soyuz ~85 km ~3 minutes
Space Shuttle ~73 km (Mach 12) ~16 minutes (longer trajectory)
Starship TBD (belly-first increases blackout) ~20–25 min (estimated)

Mitigation strategies include:

SPRITE experiment (1960s): NASA tested potassium ion injection during Gemini re-entries, partly restoring S-band communications. Modern ablators (PICA) have lower alkali-ion content than older ablators, reducing natural self-mitigation — a challenge for future crewed vehicles.