3.2 Gravity and Kepler’s Solar System

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Presentation transcript:

3.2 Gravity and Kepler’s Solar System Falling Objects Objects that are acted upon only by the force of gravity are said to be in free-fall. All three of these situations show free-falling objects. The Moon in Free Fall Newton understood that the Moon was in free-fall around the Earth. He created diagrams to explain why the Moon never falls to surface of the Earth. He described firing a cannon horizontally off the top of a mountain at ever increasing speeds. Eventually the cannon ball is travelling so fast that it travels horizontally as much as the Earth’s is curving away. The cannon ball has become a satellite. Our Moon was our first satellite.

3.2 Gravity and Kepler’s Solar System Gravitational Force, Earth, and the Moon There must be centripetal force to keep the Moon is orbiting the Earth. Newton explained that a gravitation force was required to provide this centripetal force. Using known values for the period of the Moon and it’s distance from the Earth Newton was able to determine the centripetal acceleration of the Moon as it orbits the Earth: ac = 4π2R T2 4π2(3.84 x 108 m) = = 2.7 x 10-3 m/s2 (27.3d x 25 h x 3600 s/h)2 The centripetal acceleration is actually the acceleration of gravity, g, due to the Earth at the Moon’s location. Newton was absolutely convinced that it was the gravitation force that provided the necessary centripetal force keep the Moon in its orbit about the Earth and that the gravitational force must rapidly decrease as the distance from the Earth increases.

3.2 Gravity and Kepler’s Solar System Johannes Kepler (1571 – 1630) Johannes Kepler worked in Tycho Brahe’s (1546 – 1601)laboratory. Brahe is famous for making precise observations of over 800 stars and accurate records of planets over a period of 2 decades. Kepler used these precise observations to search for mathematical patterns in the motions of the planets. Kepler formulated three laws describing the orbits of the planets around the Sun. Kepler’s Three Laws of Planetary Motion 1. Each planet orbits the Sun in a elliptical path, with the Sun at one of the two foci of the ellipse.

3.2 Gravity and Kepler’s Solar System Kepler’s Three Laws of Planetary Motion (con’t) 2. A line joining the center of the Sun and the center of any planet will trace out equal areas in equal interval of time. If time intervals T2 – T1 and T4 – T3 are equal the areas traced out by the orbital radius of a planet during this interval will be equal. (This really is a version of the Law of Conservation of Energy!) In order for this to be true a Planet during T4 – T3 has to be travelling faster than during interval T2 – T1.

3.2 Gravity and Kepler’s Solar System Kepler’s Three Laws of Planetary Motion (con’t) 3. For any planet in the solar system, the cube of its mean orbital radius divided by the square of its period of revolution is a constant. R3 T2 = K Note: This is not Universal constant. Change the solar system or orbiting system in question and you would have a new value for Kepler’s constant.

3.2 Gravity and Kepler’s Solar System In this section, you should understand how to solve the following key questions. Page #166 Practice Problems 3.2.1 Kepler’s Laws#1– 2 Page #167 – 168 3.2 Review Questions #1 – 8