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PHY134 Introductory Astronomy Gravity and Orbits 1
17

PHY134 Introductory Astronomy Gravity and Orbits 1.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: PHY134 Introductory Astronomy Gravity and Orbits 1.

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PHY134Introductory Astronomy

Gravity and Orbits

Page 2: PHY134 Introductory Astronomy Gravity and Orbits 1.

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Thinking about Orbits• Why doesn’t the Moon

fall on Earth?• It does! Moon is

constantly accelerating towards Earth. Orbiting is falling without ever hitting the ground

Page 3: PHY134 Introductory Astronomy Gravity and Orbits 1.

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Even More Generally• Newton’s law is

Universal. Apply to any two objects orbiting under mutual gravity. Find elliptical orbit about center of mass with

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Example: Low-Earth Orbit• ISS orbits at an altitude so has orbital

radius• Period given by

Page 5: PHY134 Introductory Astronomy Gravity and Orbits 1.

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Working with Newton• When I am near Earth, every bit

of Earth exerts a bit of attractive force, directed towards it. To get total, add them up.

• Newton shows that for any round shell the total force it exerts is:

• Adding it all up, outside Earth we can compute force by considering entire mass located at center

Page 6: PHY134 Introductory Astronomy Gravity and Orbits 1.

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Gravity on Earth

• Write this as• Average of latitude-dependent • Gravitational field determines acceleration for any

freely falling object• Farther from Earth force decreases

Page 7: PHY134 Introductory Astronomy Gravity and Orbits 1.

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Gravity Here and There• As I get further from

Earth force decreases• Newton:

5

1.5

-4

-2

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Potential Energy• We said potential

energy was . This true if force constant so valid near surface.

• Since force decreases, height gain costs less energy at large distance. Find

Page 9: PHY134 Introductory Astronomy Gravity and Orbits 1.

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Energy in Orbit• At radius potential energy• Speed so kinetic energy

• Total energy• Negative energy orbits are bound, closed• Positive energy orbits unbound

Page 10: PHY134 Introductory Astronomy Gravity and Orbits 1.

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The Principle of Equivalence• Astronaut is weightless

because gravity is weaker in space?

• No! h=400km so

• Astronaut is in free fall In free fall there is no gravity

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Leftovers• Earth is in free fall under gravity of Sun, so• Sun’s gravity has no effect on Earth!• Almost none. There are remnants of gravity even in freefall:

tidal forces• These are due to the fact that gravitational acceleration is

different at different points. So not all points of an extended object can possibly be simultaneously in free-fall

• Difference in free-fall acceleration (from center of Earth) acts as a tidal “force”

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How Strong is this Force?

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What about the Moon?

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The Tides• Moon deforms water so bulge faces Moon. As Earth

rotates, bulge moves around Earth so tides repeat every 24h 48m

• Earth’s rotation drags bulge East so lags Moon by about 12m

• Sun exerts tidal force towards Sun about ½ as strong. At full/new Moon act together creating intense spring tides. At quarter Moon counteract to create weak neap tides

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Even More Tides• When Moon formed – molten and closer - Earth’s tidal

forces deformed it so it froze with permanent bulge. Tidal forces keep this bulge aligned with direction to Earth: tidal locking is why we always see same side of the Moon

• Since tidal bulge on Earth is dragged East of Moon, tidal force of Moon tries to align it. This in fact slows Earth’s rotation, transferring angular momentum to the Moon which thus recedes into higher orbit (G. Darwin, 1898)

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What Now, Aristotle?• Applying universal laws leads

to unified understanding of many phenomena!

• In space, everything is in free-fall. Trajectories are Keplerian orbits. Internal structure controlled by tidal forces

• is powerful. Learn more about matter and forces