
Planets remain in orbit around the Sun because gravity continuously pulls them toward the Sun while their forward motion carries them around it.
An orbit is a continuous state of free fall in which a planet is constantly falling toward the Sun but never collides with it.
The study of planetary orbits combines:
The Sun exerts a gravitational force on every planet.
According to Newton’s Law of Gravitation:
FG=GMSmr2F_G = \frac{GM_Sm}{r^2}FG=r2GMSm
where:
This gravitational force acts as the centripetal force required for orbital motion.
For circular motion:
FC=mv2rF_C = \frac{mv^2}{r}FC=rmv2
For a planet in orbit:
FG=FCF_G = F_CFG=FC
Therefore:
GMSmr2=mv2r\frac{GM_Sm}{r^2} = \frac{mv^2}{r}r2GMSm=rmv2
The planet’s mass cancels.
Solving for orbital speed:
v=GMSrv = \sqrt{\frac{GM_S}{r}}v=rGMS
The orbital speed depends on:
The orbital speed does not depend on the planet’s mass.
Because:
v=GMSrv = \sqrt{\frac{GM_S}{r}}v=rGMS
a larger orbital radius produces a smaller orbital speed.
Inner planets move faster.
Outer planets move slower.
For example:
The orbital period is the time required to complete one orbit.
For circular motion:
v=2πrTv = \frac{2\pi r}{T}v=T2πr
where:
Substituting the orbital-speed equation gives:
T=2πr3GMST = 2\pi \sqrt{\frac{r^3}{GM_S}}T=2πGMSr3
Squaring the orbital-period equation:
T2=4π2GMSr3T^2 = \frac{4\pi^2}{GM_S} r^3T2=GMS4π2r3
This leads directly to Kepler’s Third Law:
T2∝r3T^2 \propto r^3T2∝r3
Planets farther from the Sun require longer periods to complete an orbit.
Real planetary orbits are not perfectly circular.
According to Kepler’s First Law:
Every planet moves in an ellipse with the Sun at one focus.
An ellipse contains:
The Sun occupies one focus.
The point where a planet is closest to the Sun.
rminr_{\min}rmin
At perihelion:
The point where a planet is farthest from the Sun.
rmaxr_{\max}rmax
At aphelion:
The Sun’s gravitational force always points toward the Sun.
Therefore:
τ=0\tau=0τ=0
Since:
∑τ=dLdt\sum\tau = \frac{dL}{dt}∑τ=dtdL
we obtain:
L=constantL=\text{constant}L=constant
Angular momentum remains conserved throughout the orbit.
Because angular momentum is conserved:
A line joining the planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas during equal time intervals.
This means:
The total energy of a planet in orbit is:
E=K+UE=K+UE=K+U
where:
K=12mv2K=\frac12 mv^2K=21mv2
and
U=−GMSmrU = -\frac{GM_Sm}{r}U=−rGMSm
For a circular orbit:
K=GMSm2rK = \frac{GM_Sm}{2r}K=2rGMSm
Potential energy:
U=−GMSmrU = -\frac{GM_Sm}{r}U=−rGMSm
Therefore:
E=−GMSm2rE = -\frac{GM_Sm}{2r}E=−2rGMSm
A bound orbit always has:
E<0E<0E<0
Negative total energy means the planet remains gravitationally bound to the Sun.
To escape the Sun’s gravitational attraction completely:
E≥0E\ge0E≥0
The planet or spacecraft must gain enough kinetic energy so that the total mechanical energy becomes nonnegative.
A planet orbits the Sun at:
r=4Rr=4Rr=4R
where RRR is Earth’s orbital radius.
Compare its orbital period to Earth’s.
Using Kepler’s Third Law:
Tp2(4R)3=TE2R3\frac{T_p^2}{(4R)^3} = \frac{T_E^2}{R^3}(4R)3Tp2=R3TE2 Tp2=64TE2T_p^2 = 64T_E^2Tp2=64TE2 Tp=8TET_p = 8T_ETp=8TE
The planet requires eight times longer to complete one orbit.
Examples:
Characteristics:
Examples:
Characteristics:
Assuming planets move with constant speed.
Only circular orbits have constant speed.
Elliptical orbits do not.
Using the planet’s mass in the orbital-speed equation.
v=GMSrv = \sqrt{\frac{GM_S}{r}}v=rGMS
The planet’s mass cancels.
Confusing orbital speed and orbital period.
A larger orbit means:
Provides the force responsible for planetary motion.
Gravity acts as the centripetal force.
Explains orbital binding and escape.
Explains varying speeds in elliptical orbits.
Describe the observable behavior of planets.
Gravitational force:
FG=GMSmr2F_G = \frac{GM_Sm}{r^2}FG=r2GMSm
Orbital speed:
v=GMSrv = \sqrt{\frac{GM_S}{r}}v=rGMS
Orbital period:
T=2πr3GMST = 2\pi \sqrt{\frac{r^3}{GM_S}}T=2πGMSr3
Total energy of a circular orbit:
E=−GMSm2rE = -\frac{GM_Sm}{2r}E=−2rGMSm
Kepler’s Third Law:
T2∝r3T^2 \propto r^3T2∝r3
Key ideas:
The study of planetary orbits unifies gravitation, circular motion, energy, angular momentum, and Kepler’s Laws, making it one of the most important applications of AP Physics C Mechanics.
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