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Celestial Mechanics Planetary motions • The planets move relative to the background stars. • Sometimes they show complex retrograde motions Epicycles • Epicycles were introduced to explain the non-uniform velocities of planets, in a geocentric, circular-orbit theory Retrograde motion • Retrograde motion is a natural outcome of the heliocentric model • Inner planets orbit more quickly than outer planets, and so “overtake” them Distances to Interior planets • Venus and Mercury follow the Sun around the ecliptic: means their orbits are smaller than Earth’s • At greatest elongation a line between the Sun and planet is perpendicular to a line between Earth and planet. rPlanet Sun sin rEarth Sun • E.g. for Venus, =46 degrees, so the distance from Venus to the Sun is 0.72 times the EarthSun distance Distances to exterior planets • Exterior planets can be found anywhere in the zodiacal belt • The true orbital period of the planet (sidereal period) tells how long it takes the planet to return to point P. • Observe the angles PES(initially) and PES (one superior planet period later). • The angle ESE’ is known from the Earth’s orbital period vs. the planets. And the triangles can be solved. Sidereal and synodic periods It is easy to observe the synodic period: this is the time between successive oppostions (when the Earth, Sun and planet are aligned). But how do we know when a planet has completed one sidereal period (i.e. is in the same position relative to the background stars? The angular velocity of a circular orbit is 360/P. The synodic rate is the rate of the planet relative to the Earth. So: 360 360 360 PSynodic PEarth P sidereal Tycho Brahe • Brahe (1546-1601) believed in a geocentric Universe: the Sun and moon go around the Earth (but the other planets go around the Sun) • However, he also believed that this theory could be tested by making sufficiently accurate observations At time this was a revolutionary approach: different from the idea that phenomena could be understood through philosophical discourse alone Arguably the first application of the scientific method Tycho Brahe’s observations • Made very accurate, naked eye observations of planetary motion Used devices for measuring angles and positions To measure time, he used the planetary motions themselves. Clocks were rare and the pendulum clock had not been invented sextant wall quadrant Kepler’s Laws Johannes Kepler derived the following 3 empirical laws, based on Tycho Brahe’s careful observations of planetary positions (astrometry). 1. A planet orbits the Sun in an ellipse, with the Sun at one focus (supporting the Copernican heliocentric model and disproving Brahe’s hypothesis) 2. A line connecting a planet to the Sun sweeps out equal areas in equal time intervals 3. PP2 2 =aa33, where P is the period and a is the average distance from the Sun. Break What is an ellipse? Definition: An ellipse is a closed curve defined by the locus of all points such that the sum of the distances from the two foci is a constant: r r 2a Ellipticity: Relates the semi-major (a) and semi-minor (b) axes: a 2 a 2e 2 b 2 b 1 e2 a Equation of an ellipse: r 2 r 2 sin 2 2ae r cos 2 Substituting r r 2a and rearranging we get: a 1 e2 r 1 e cos Ellipses Calculate the aphelion and perihelion distances for Halley’s comet, which has a semi-major axis of 17.9 AU and an eccentricity of 0.967. Kepler’s Second Law 2. A line connecting a planet to the Sun sweeps out equal areas in equal time intervals This is just a consequence of angular momentum conservation. L r p mrv Angular momentum conservation Since L is constant, La L p (aphelion=perihilion) mra va mrp v p va rp 1 e v p ra 1 e Angular momentum conservation How much faster does Earth move at perihelion compared with aphelion? The eccentricity is e=0.0167 vp va 1 e 1 e 1.0167 0.9833 1.034 i.e. 3.4% faster Orbital angular momentum We know the angular momentum is constant; but what is its value? Lrp rv zˆ Since L is constant, we can take A and t at any time, or over any time interval. dA L 2m dt L 2m 2m Aellipse P a 2 1 e 2 P Kepler’s Third Law The general form of Kepler’s third law can be derived from Newton’s laws. 4 2 a 3 P G ( M m) 2 Example: the dwarf planet Eris has a small moon, Dysnomia. This moon orbits at a distance of about 30,000 km, with a period of about 14 days. What is the combined mass of the Eris/Dysnomia system?