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“Concern for man himself and his fate must always form the chief interest of all technical endeavors… Never forget this in the midst of your diagrams and equations.” Albert Einstein
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Gravity Math
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The History We have learned the history of gravity, the missteps and false starts, the names of the movers and shakers in the field, and the progression of the ideas
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The Math The math for gravity is a mix of the equations for circular motion and the physics for acceleration
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What could we want to know? Let us make a list of the possible bits of information we could want to know about an object orbiting around another, or about the attraction between two objects
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The List Constants Acceleration Force Period Velocity Mass of either object
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The Constant There is one constant involved, the gravitational constant
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Acceleration We know that a change in direction requires an acceleration We saw this for circular motion
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Acceleration r is the distance from the center of the mass M is the mass of the attracting object
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Note… The mass of the falling object is not a factor Only the mass of the planet, Sun, or other large, attracting body and distance of the item from the center counts
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Example 1 At sea-level the radius of the Earth is 6.38 × 10 6 m. If the mass of the Earth is 5.98 × 10 24 kg, what is gravitational acceleration at sea-level? What is it atop Mt. Everest, 8848 m above sea-level?
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What Do We Know G = 6.67 × 10 -11 Nm 2 /kg 2 r 1 = 6.38 × 10 6 m m = 5.98 × 10 24 kg r 2 = ((6.38 × 10 6 )+ 8848) m
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Answer 1 a = Gm/r 2 a 1 = 9.799 m/s 2 ≈ 9.80 m/s 2 a 2 = 9.772 m/s 2 ≈ 9.77 m/s 2
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Example 2 Jupiter orbits the sun at a radius of 7.78 ×10 11 m. The Sun has a mass of 1.99 ×10 30 kg. What is the acceleration holding Jupiter in its orbit?
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What Do We Know G = 6.67 × 10 -11 Nm 2 /kg 2 r = 7.78 ×10 11 m m = 1.99 ×10 30 kg
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Answer 2 a = Gm/r 2 a = 2.1929 × 10 -4 m/s 2 ≈ 2.19 × 10 -4 m/s 2
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Force We already know the basic equation
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Force If we know the mass of the object, we need only find the acceleration to calculate the force
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Force
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G is the gravitational constant M is the larger of the two masses m is the smaller of the two r is the radius between them
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Force This was Newton’s big achievement He was able to find out what Kepler’s constant was
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Example 3 Pluto has a mass of 1.25 × 10 22 kg and an orbital radius of 5.87 × 10 12 m. What is the force, in Newtons, between Pluto and the Sun?
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What Do We Know G = 6.67 × 10 -11 Nm 2 /kg 2 r = 5.87 × 10 12 m m = 1.25 ×10 22 kg M = 1.99 ×10 30 kg
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Answer 3 F = GMm/r 2 F = 4.82 × 10 16 N
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Period
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Remember, this is the time it takes to make one full revolution The time is measured in seconds
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Example 4 What is the orbital period of Pluto, given the information from the pervious problems?
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What Do We Know G = 6.67 × 10 -11 Nm 2 /kg 2 r = 5.87 × 10 12 m M = 1.99 ×10 30 kg
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Answer 4 T = 2π(r 3 /(GM)) 1/2 T = 7.76 × 10 9 s Converted to years T = 246 years
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Example 5 The Earth has a period of 365 days. If it orbits at a radius of 1.50×10 11 m, then what is the mass of the Sun.
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What Do We Know G = 6.67 × 10 -11 Nm 2 /kg 2 r = 1.50 × 10 11 m T = 365 days = 3.15 × 10 7 s
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Answer 5 T = 2π(r 3 /(GM)) 1/2 M = (4π 2 r 3 )/(GT 2 ) M = 2.01 × 10 30 kg
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Velocity
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The velocity of the orbiting object depends only on the mass of the larger body, not the mass of the orbiting object
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Example 6 A satellite orbits the Earth at a distance of 340000 m. The mass of the Earth is 5.97 × 10 24 kg. What velocity must it have to maintain that orbit?
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What Do We Know G = 6.67 × 10 -11 Nm 2 /kg 2 M = 5.97 × 10 24 kg r = 340000 m
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Answer 6 v = ((GM)/r) 1/2 v = 34222 m/s ≈ 34200 m/s
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