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Universal gravitation • Midterm #2 on Thursday at 7:30pm in same rooms • Midterm covers Chapters 5-8 (up through Monday’s lecture). Includes CAPA due Tuesday and the tutorial homework due this week. • Old midterm exams are posted in D2L. • Files with clicker questions are posted in D2L. 1 Universal Gravitation: Potential energy Gravity is a conservative force and therefore has a potential energy associated with it Gm1m2 UG = − r Can use conservation of energy to determine things like velocity at a given height or the escape velocity. Gm1m2 Total energy E = K +UG = m v + m v − r 1 2 2 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 is conserved Often one mass is much more massive and is basically GMm 2 1 motionless and so the total energy is E = K +UG = 2 mv − r Negative total energy is a bound system (closed orbits or objects eventually colliding). Total energy ≥ 0 is an unbound system. 2 Clicker question 1 Set frequency to BA The gravitational potential energy of a two mass system, where m << M is plotted. Mass M is stationary at the origin and mass m is at r=r0. Also shown is the total energy Etot. Which arrow represents the kinetic energy of mass m? A. A B. B C. C D. None of these UG = − GMm r r0 B C A r Etot The total energy E is equal to the sum of the potential and kinetic energies: E = K + U so K = E – U. 3 Escape velocity We define escape velocity as the minimum speed needed to escape a gravitational field (usually from the surface). Escaping means being able to reach r = ∞. We found this is possible if we have a total energy ≥ 0. Total energy of 0 means UG + K = 0 , that is K = −UG = + Gm1m2 r For object m1 on the surface of a planet 1 m v 2 = Gm1M P with mass MP and radius RP this translates to 2 1 RP 2GM P Solving for the speed gives vescape = RP This equation actually works for any radius outside the planets radius. Just replace RP with the distance from the planet’s center. 4 Clicker question 2 Set frequency to BA Does escape velocity depend on launch angle? That is, if a projectile is given an initial speed vo, is it more or less likely to escape an airless, non-rotating planet, if fired straight up than if fired at an angle? A. Yes B. No We derived the escape velocity using conservation of energy. All that is needed is for the projectile to have enough kinetic energy such that the total energy is 0. Kinetic energy only depends on the magnitude of the velocity (squared), not the direction so the angle is irrelevant. On rotating planets the escape velocity is the same but the initial velocity is not zero so the angle matters. On planets with air, take offs are more straight up to reduce the energy loss due to air resistance.5 History of solar system understanding 1543: Nicholas Copernicus theorizes that the Earth orbits the sun. 1609 & 1619: Johannes Kepler uses 30 years of data collected by Tycho Brahe to derive 3 laws for planetary motion planet 1. Planets move in elliptical orbits with sun at one focus Sun 2. A line drawn between sun and planet sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time 3. The square of a planet’s orbital period is proportional to the cube of the semimajor-axis length These laws can be derived from Newton’s 1687 gravity theory. 6 Circular orbits from a force perspective All closed orbits are ellipses but we will analyze the simpler case of circular orbits. Very good approximation for planets and moons. Not so good for comets. A small object m in orbit around a large object M is called a satellite. r ! ! Newton’s 2nd law is Fnet = ma M ! v ! FG GMm The only force is gravity: FG = r 2 2 v The acceleration is only radial: a = r GMm = m v2 Therefore: r 2 r Solving for v gives vorbit = Note that orbital velocity only depends on M/r. GM r 7 m Orbital period Orbital period T is the time it takes to complete one revolution. Orbital speed can be determined by distance covered in one revolution (circumference) divided by the period: vorbit We already know that vorbit GM = r 3/2 2π r r 2π r = 2π r = So T = vorbit GM GM 2π r = T ! v r M ! FG 2 4 π r3 Can also write as T = GM 2 proving Kepler’s 3rd law (for circular orbits) 8 m Orbits from an energy perspective For a circular orbit we know vorbit = can calculate the kinetic energy 1 2 1 GM GMm K = mvorbit = m = 2 2 r 2r GM so we r GMm Remember, potential energy is UG = − r ! v r M ! FG m So kinetic energy is K = − 12 UG Always before, kinetic and potential energy were independent. For circular orbits, this is no longer true. 1 1 Furthermore, the total energy is E = K +UG = − 2 UG +UG = 2 UG Since Ug < 0, total energy E < 0 which is the requirement for a closed orbit (which of course a circular orbit is). 9 Gravitational potential energy Graph of potential energy, kinetic energy, and total energy for circular orbits. To get from a low orbit r1 to a higher orbit r2 requires an increase in energy. While the kinetic energy decreases, potential energy increases (twice as much) K E ΔE UG r1 r2 Work is needed to change the energy. Since work is force times displacement, rockets are generally fired in (or against) the direction of motion to change orbits rather than perpendicular. 10 Clicker question 3 Set frequency to BA Two satellites are in stable circular orbits. Satellite 2 has a speed of v2 and is twice as far from the center of the Earth as satellite 1, which has a speed of v1. What is the ratio of their speeds? A. v1 / v2 = 1 / 2 B. v1 / v2 = 1 / 2 Ecircular orbit = K orbit +UG = 12 UG C. v1 / v2 = 1 D. v1 / v2 = 2 K orbit E. v1 / v2 = 2 v1 = GM GM v2 = r1 and r2 GMm = 2r vorbit = so v1 GM = v2 r1 GMm UG = − r GM r vescape = 2GM P RP 2 4 π T = r3 GM 2 r2 r = 2 = 2 GM r1 11