Chapter 12
Chapter 12
Chapter 12
Gravitation
Gravity
9 the force that holds the Moon in its orbit is the same
that makes an apple fall
9 not only does Earth attract an apple and the Moon
but every body in the Universe attract every other
body
Isaac Newton 1665
1
Newton’s law of Gravitation
Example
Find the force of gravity between a student (70 kg or
154 lb) and a textbook (2 kg or 4.4 lb) when they are
separated by a distance of 0.3 m (or 0.98 ft)
(70.0kg )( 2.0kg )
F = (6.67 × 10−11 Nm 2 / kg 2 ) 2
= 1.04 × 10−7 N
(0.3m)
the force to keep 1 dime (F=mg) is about
i.e. F ≅ 0.00001 Fd
Gravitational force decreases with distance as 1/r2
An increase in distance by a factor of 10 results in a decrease in the force4by a
factor of 100.
2
Questions and problems
1. Why do we care, if the force of gravity between
object around us is so small?
2. How to calculate the gravitational force between
real objects, i.e. that are not point-like ones?
3. What to do if there are more than two particles?
4. Motion and gravity
5. What would happen as r->0 ?
3
Gravitational attraction between real
objects
1. If the sizes of the objects are small compared to the
distance between them – we may consider the objects
like particles (good approximation for Moon-Earth)
REarth = 6,370 km
RMoon = 1,061 km
r = 382,000 km
Mm
F =G
r2
r
r
4
Gravitation near Earth’s surface
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5
Gravitation inside Earth or …
Journey to the Center of the Earth
More from Newton’s shell theorem
GM 4π 3
g= M = ρV = ρ r
r2 3
GM G 4π 3
g= = 2ρ r
r2 r 3
4π
g= Gρ r
3
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for r=0 g=0, or the net gravitational force inside Earth = 0
6
Gravitational potential energy
Potential energy is energy that can be associated with the
configuration of a system of objects that can exerts forces
on one another. If the configuration of the system changes,
the potential energy of the systems can also change.
Gravitational potential energy
GMm
U =−
r
GMm
U =− and U = mgh
r
GMm GMm r −r
ΔU = − + = GMm f i
rf ri ri rf
if rf − ri << ri
rf − ri
ΔU = GMm ≈m
GM
2
(rf − ri ) = mgh
ri rf ri
The formula we have used in the past, U = mgh, is valid
only when rf − ri << ri . 14
7
Gravitational potential energy for many particles
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16
8
Part 1: Vertical motion
Conservation of energy Ki + U i = K f + U f
Vertical motion before (potential energy from zero at h=0)
mvi2 mv 2f
+ mghi = + mgh f
2 2
Vertical motion now (potential energy from zero at r→∞)
2
mvi2 GMm mv f GMm
− = −
2 ri 2 rf
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9
Vertical motion: Escape speed
Vertical projectile motion: up, up and … up
There is a certain minimum initial speed that will cause
a projectile to move upward forever, theoretically
coming to rest only at infinity (g is not a constant!).
From conservation of energy
2
mvi2 GMm mv f GMm
− = − =0
2 Ri 2 Rf
2GM
vi = escape speed
Ri
for Earth: M=5.98*1024 kg, Ri=6.37*106 m, v=11.2 km/s
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r
h if vx=0 then vertical motion
at some vx = vc – circular motion
GMm vc2
=m
r
r
( r + h )2 r+h
GM
vc =
r+h 20
For a shuttle: v=7.9 km/s
10
Satellites: Orbits and Energy
As a satellite orbits Earth on its elliptical path, both its speed,
which fixes its kinetic energy K, and its distance from the
center of Earth, which fixes its gravitational potential energy U,
fluctuate with fixed periods. However, the mechanical energy
E of the satellite remains constant.
For circular orbits (second Newton’s law)
GMm v2
=m
r2 r
2
mv
K=
2
GMm U
K= =−
2r 2 21
11
Example
23
Checkpoint
24
12
Planets and satellites: Kepler’s Laws
13
Planets and satellites: Kepler’s Laws (cont.)
ω = 3 =⎜ ⎟
2
r ⎝ T ⎠
⎛ 4π 2 ⎞ 3 2π 3 / 2
The period does not depend on T = ⎜⎜
2
⎟⎟ r or T = r
the mass of the orbiting object. ⎝ GM ⎠ GM
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14
Black Holes
2GM 8πGρ
vescape = = R
R 3
example: escape speed from the surface of the sun is
about 2.2 million km/h or 1.5 million mph
2GM 2GM
For light c = Rs =
Rs c2
Rs is the Schwarzschild radius (nothing, not even light
can escape from that body/star)
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example
Geosynchronous satellites
Many satellites are moving in a circle in the earth’s
equatorial plane. They are at such height that they
always remain above the same point.
Find the altitude of such satellites above the earth’s
surface
2π
T= r 3 / 2 = 24 * 3600 s
GM E
1/ 3
⎛ T 2GM E ⎞
r = ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ = 4.23 ⋅ 107 m
⎝ 4π
2
⎠
h = r − RE = 3.59 ⋅ 107 m
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15
Millennium Simulation:
http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/galform/press/
The biggest and most detailed supercomputer simulation
of the evolution of the Universe from a few hundred
thousand years after the Big Bang to the present day.
The Millennium Simulation used 10 billion particles to track
the evolution of 20 million galaxies over the history of the
universe.
A 3-dimensional visualization of the Millennium Simulation.
The movie shows a journey through the simulated universe.
During the two minutes of the movie, we travel a distance
for which light would need more than 2.4 billion years. 31
Physics of Gravitation
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