Keplar
Keplar
Keplar
1970s initially presumed that spiral galaxies were standard orbital systems, just like the Solar
system, and that the laws of planetary motion should apply. As a result, when the rotational
velocities of disk objects were found to be generally flat at all peripheral radii, conflicting with
characteristic Keplerian rotation curves, it was concluded that either classical mechanics had been
falsified at large scales, or that some enormous, undetected form of matter must be present to
extend the distribution of galactic mass to very large radii. The procedural assessment conducted
here shows that very large scale aggregations of massive objects cannot be expected to rotate like
the highly centralized mass of the Solar system. Newton proved long ago that Keplerian relations
specifically apply only to the mass distribution inherent in the Solar system. As a result, no galactic
dark matter need be inferred from any discrepancy with Keplerian rotation curves.
A3 = P 2
There were two problems with this relation. First, Kepler did not know how it
worked, he just knew it did. Second, the relation does not work for objects which
are not orbiting the Sun, for example, the Moon orbiting the Earth. Isaac Newton
solved both these problems with his Theory of Gravity, and discovered that the
masses of the orbiting bodies also play a part. Newton developed a more general
form of what was called Kepler's Third Law that could apply to any two objects
orbiting a common center of mass. This is called Newton's Version of Kepler's
Third Law:
M1 + M2 = A3 / P2
Special units must be used to make this equation work. If the data are not given in
the proper units, they must be converted.
The masses must be measured in solar masses, where one solar mass is 1.99 X
1033 grams, or 1.99 X 1030 kilograms.
The semi-major axis must be measured in Astronomical Units, where 1 AU is
149,600,000 kilometers, or 93,000,000 miles.
The orbital period must be measured in years, where 1 year is 365.25 days.
This relation has many uses: determining the mass of a planet by looking at its
moon(s), studying binary star systems, even determining the mass of the Galaxy!
There is a problem, however, with the way the equation is written above. Often, we
are not able to determine to a high degree of accuracy the average distance
between, say, two binary stars. We must use a modified version of NVK3L for very
distant objects.
To achieve this modification, we must first introduce an equation for velocity, how
fast an object is traveling. Everybody who has driven a car has encountered the
formula for velocity. The speedometer on a car measures velocity in miles per
hour, or kilometers per hour. Now miles or kilometers are ways of
measuring distance, hours are what we use to measure time, and "per" is a word
signaling division. Therefore, the formula for velocity is
Circumference = C = 2 (pi) A
So the velocity equation becomes
Velocity = V = C / P = 2 (pi) A / P
Remember that we can compute velocity using the Doppler Effect. We can
observe the orbital period easily. It is the value of A that is typically very hard to
find. So we turn the equation above around, and solve for A:
A = V P / 2 (pi)
We can now take this value of A and plug it in to Newton's Version of Kepler's
Third Law to get an equation involving knowable things, like V and P:
M1 + M2 = V3P3 / 23(pi)3P2
M1 + M2 = V3P / 8(pi)3
What this equation is basically telling us is, the more mass there is in a system, the
faster the components of that system are moving as they orbit each other. We shall
not use this more complicated version of NVK3L for homework calculations, but
we will use the concept in our discussion of black holes.
Sun. It has likewise been shown be me that the orbit of a planet is elliptical,
and the Sun, the source of motion, is in one of the foci of this ellipse."
Jon-Richfield says:
Reply I am not sure what baffles you about that, because there is only one place where the other focus can be (except
where the elliptical orbit of the planet happens to be a circle --namely where the two foci are in the same place).
That other place for the other (eccentric) focus is ... not at the centre of the body round which the planet is
orbiting. The eccentric focus might be off-centre within the sun, or if the orbit is really very eccentric, the eccentric
focus will be out in space away from the sun. Comets in elliptical orbit have such foci for example.
To draw yourself such a picture, draw an ellipse, showing the foci, and draw the sun round one focus. There you
have it!
Now, possibly you are bothered, because at one end of the orbit you have the planet scooting along an orbit
around a massive sun that holds it on course, and at the other end it follows exactly the same orbit round...
nothing???
Yes, sort of, but... there is another difference, isn't there? Speed!
Suppose you drop a satellite towards a distant primary, such as perhaps a star 150000000 km away, giving it just
enough sideways momentum to prevent it hitting the sun. It will fall first very slowly, then faster and faster as it
approaches the sun, but it will not pick up more momentum than the sun's gravity had contributed by pulling it
downwards (never mind Einstein at this point; it doesn't really affect us much.) This means that even when it is
travelling at nearly its fastest as it passes the sun, the sun doesn't let it escape, but pulls it round and swings it
back.
Because the sun now pulls back on the planet exactly as hard as it had been pulling it nearer, the planet slows
down exactly as quickly as it had speeded up and it necessarily follows an outward path exactly symmetrical with
its inward path. To be sure there is no gravitational mass at the other focus, but there does not need to be; when
the planet is near the empty, eccentric focus it is travelling at its slowest. The distant mass of the sun is adequate
to deal with its now small momentum.
For the 3rd law, assume a planet is in a circular orbit. This is because the perimeter of an ellipse is
extremely difficult to calculate, and the eccentricities of the elliptical orbits are small anyway.
The gravitational attractive force exerted on the planet by the Sun is given by the Newtonian formula F
= GMm/d where G is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the Sun, m is the mass of the planet
and d is the Sun-to-planet distance.
The centripetal force needed to hold the planet in orbit is given by the expression F = mv/d where v is
the orbital velocity.
These two forces are the same.
figure 36:
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dA/dt = rv /2 = r (d /dt).
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