Sect. 6-5: Kepler’s Laws & Newton’s Synthesis
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Transcript of Sect. 6-5: Kepler’s Laws & Newton’s Synthesis
Sect. 6-5: Kepler’s Laws & Newton’s Synthesis
• German astronomer (1571 – 1630)• Spent most of his career tediously
analyzing huge amounts of observational data (most compiled by Tycho Brahe) on planetary motion (orbit periods, orbit radii, etc.)
• He used his analysis to develop
“Laws” of Planetary Motion.“Laws” in the sense that they agree with
observation, but not true theoretical laws,
such as Newton’s Laws of Motion & Newton’s Universal Law of Gravitation.
Johannes Kepler
Kepler’s “Laws” are consistent with & are obtainable from Newton’s Laws
• Kepler’s First LawAll planets move in elliptical orbits with the Sun at one focus
• Kepler’s Second Law The radius vector drawn from the Sun to a plane sweeps out
equal areas in equal time intervals• Kepler’s Third Law
The square of the orbital period of any planet is proportional to the cube of the semimajor axis of the elliptical orbit
Kepler’s “Laws”
• The points F1 & F2 are each a focus of the ellipse– Located a distance c from the center– Sum of r1 and r2 is constant
• Longest distance through center is the major axis, 2a a is called the semimajor axis
• Shortest distance through center is the minor axis, 2bb is called the semiminor axis
Math Review: Ellipses
Typical Ellipse
• The eccentricity is defined as e = (c/a)– For a circle, e = 0– The range of values of the eccentricity for ellipses is 0 < e < 1– The higher the value of e, the longer and thinner the ellipse
• The Sun is at one focus– Nothing is located at the other focus
• Aphelion is the point farthest away from the Sun– The distance for aphelion is a + c
For an orbit around the Earth, this point is called the apogee• Perihelion is the point nearest the Sun
– The distance for perihelion is a – cFor an orbit around the Earth, this point is called the perigee
Ellipses & Planet Orbits
All planets move in elliptical orbits with the Sun at one focus
• A circular orbit is a special case of an elliptical orbitThe eccentricity of a circle is e = 0.
• Kepler’s 1st Law can be shown (& was by Newton) to be a direct result of the inverse square nature of the gravitational force. Comes out of N’s 2nd Law + N’s Gravitation Law + Calculus
• Elliptic (and circular) orbits are allowed for bound objects– A bound object repeatedly orbits the center– An unbound object would pass by and not return
• These objects could have paths that are parabolas (e = 1) and hyperbolas (e > 1)
Kepler’s 1st Law
Kepler’s 1st Law Each planet’s orbit is an ellipse, with
the Sun at one focus.
• Fig. (a): Mercury’s orbit has the largest eccentricity of the planets.
eMercury = 0.21Note: Pluto’s eccentricity is ePluto = 0.25, but, as of 2006, it is officially no longer classified as a planet!
• Fig. (b): Halley’s Comet’s orbit has high eccentricity
eHalley’s comet = 0.97• Remember that nothing physical is located at the second focus
– The small dot
Orbit Examples
• Kepler’s 2nd Law can be shown (& was by Newton) to be a direct result of the fact that N’s Gravitation Law gives Conservation of Angular Momentum for each planet.
• The Gravitational force produces no Torque (it is to the motion) so that Angular Momentum is conserved. (Neither torque nor angular momentum have been discussed yet.)
Kepler’s 2nd LawThe radius vector drawn from the Sun to a planet sweeps out equal areas in
equal time intervals
Kepler’s 2nd LawAn imaginary line drawn from each planet to the Sun
sweeps out equal areas in equal times.
• Geometrically, in a time dt, the radius vector r sweeps out the area dA = half the area of the parallelogram
• The displacement is dr = v dt• Mathematically, this means
• That is: the radius vector from the Sun to any planet sweeps out equal areas in equal times
Kepler’s 2nd Law
constant2 p
dA Ldt M
• If the orbit is circular & of radius r, this follows from Newton’s Universal Gravitation.
• This gravitational force supplies a centripetal force for user in Newton’s 2nd Law
• Ks is a constant
2Sun Planet Planet
2
22 3 3
Sun
2
4S
GM M M vr rrv
T
T r K rGM
Kepler’s 3rd LawThe square of the orbital period T of any planet is proportional to the cube of the semimajor axis a of the elliptical orbit
Ks is a constant, which
is the same for all planets.