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0 votes
1 answer
100 views

Estimate Saturn's mass [closed]

How can you estimate Saturn's mass using data from Cassini's final moments in September 2017 (apoapsis on September 12 at 1:27 a.m. EDT Saturn time at a distance of about $1.3*10^6$ km from Saturn, ...
Enkt Enktson's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
284 views

How to measure the ratio of a planet's radius to a star?

I was reading a physics problem related to astronomy, and upon re-reading it, I realized that it could be really indicated to extrapolate some really interesting physics-related information. One of ...
Bml's user avatar
  • 439
16 votes
6 answers
4k views

If another planet was opposite Earth, would we be able to observe it?

Imagine another Earth-sized planet, in the exact same orbit as Earth, but 180 degrees out-of-phase. In this arrangement, at all times, you would be able to draw a single straight line through space ...
ConnieMnemonic's user avatar
3 votes
3 answers
183 views

Why do the planets tend to spin in the same direction as they orbit the center sun?

I mean, why do the spin angular momentum and the orbit angular momentum of a planet tend to have the same direction? As we all know, a planetesimal $m$ orbiting a sun with mass $M_{sun}$ at $r$ will ...
Harry's user avatar
  • 309
1 vote
2 answers
47 views

Is it possible to determine if a planet can have a moon based on its mass and gravitational pull?

I'm curious, if based on what we know with Newton's law, can we determine if a random planet, knowing it's mass and gravitational pull, can hold a moon in it's orbit. Or to phrase it another way, is ...
Oneiros's user avatar
  • 111
0 votes
2 answers
292 views

How does Kepler's Second Law show that a planet further from the sun will move slower?

This is probably a very stupid question. We are told that due to Kepler's Second Law, which according to this very straightforward explanation: "Kepler's second law of planetary motion describes ...
Gordon's user avatar
  • 54
0 votes
3 answers
366 views

Are moons always smaller than the planets they orbit?

I'm not a physicist, asking for knowledge. Is there any moon orbiting a planet, but bigger than that planet? If not, is it mathematically possible for a bigger object to orbit around a smaller object ...
Peyman's user avatar
  • 113
0 votes
0 answers
43 views

Why are the orbit of planets usually ellipses? [duplicate]

There has been a similar question about planets' orbits being ellipses but the answer circulates around how the circle is a special type of orbit which doesn't really answer my question. Elaborate ...
Aarushi Agarwal's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
230 views

Angular momentum of a planet about apogee

Angular momentum of a planet about its apogee is maximum at __________ Now, I do know that Angular momentum of a planet around the focus of the elliptical orbit (the sun) is conserved due to gravity ...
insipidintegrator's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
47 views

Does the Lagrange Point $L_3$ exist in practice in the multi-body solar system?

Lagrange Points ($L_1$ through $L_5$) in a restricted 3-body system are well documented. Traditionally body 1 (M1) is the central object with a mass much greater than the other two objects. M2 is ...
Carlos N's user avatar
  • 111
-2 votes
3 answers
149 views

Why is the shape of the orbit of the Earth as it is?

My View: I think that if the sun were only force acting on earth (as a centripetal force), the earth would have a circular orbit. Since other planets also exist , there also exists gravitational force ...
Aarushi Agarwal's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
115 views

Could a moon keep orbiting a planet forever?

Our Moon orbits the Earth further away each year due to the tidal forces but could there be a moon orbiting a planet where somehow keeps going further away by the tidal forces but its attracted again ...
vengaq's user avatar
  • 2,462
0 votes
1 answer
192 views

Help finding the eccentricity of an orbit

I am trying to find the eccentricity of a planet in order to be able to calculate perihelion and aphelion distances. I can get a lot of the equation, but am having issues with the angular momentum, ...
Zoey's user avatar
  • 221
0 votes
2 answers
329 views

How to represent orbital velocity of a planet on an elliptical path in terms of time?

Before reading this long message, please know that this is question is posted to know whether there is a method to find the relation between between the orbital velocity of a planet on an elliptical ...
noob anomaly's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
505 views

Does the formula $v = \sqrt{GM/r}$ work for elliptical planetary orbits?

Suppose we have a central mass $M$ and a smaller mass $m$ orbiting around the central mass in an ellipse: The other point is the other focus. We know that elliptical orbits have the central mass in ...
Angular Orbit's user avatar
15 votes
3 answers
3k views

Simulating solar system with Newton's law

I made a simulation in C++ with Newtons law and test it comparing the planets positions with the position from Solar system Calculator Don Cross (which I converted from JavaScript to C++) http://...
Luis ALberto's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
60 views

Understanding the third Kepler law [closed]

Consider a system of two masse $M$ and $m$ with $m<<M$ and the mass $m$ orbiting around $M$. Then $m$ describes a elliptic orbit with period $P$ and the third Kepler law states that: $$\frac{P^2}...
Dicordi's user avatar
  • 183
15 votes
6 answers
4k views

What's the actual path of the planets?

I read about Kepler's Laws and in one of them he mentions that the path of a planet is an ellipse, with the sun as one of its foci (I'm narrowing down this to only our solar system). However though I'...
Vamsi Krishna's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
259 views

Orbit eccentricity and initial velocity

I was thinking about orbital velocities, and came across this question (Velocity of satellites greater than required velocity). Does the answer to this question imply that for planets going round the ...
hamayoun's user avatar
  • 141
1 vote
2 answers
5k views

How do scientists calculate the orbital period of a planet?

It is known that you can calculate the distance to a planet using parallax, but how do scientists calculate the orbital period of a planet? (Assuming they don't know the distance and can't use Kepler'...
Sarvesh Thiruppathi's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
479 views

What determines if an object will stay in a planet's orbit? [duplicate]

Say you threw an object 10 AU from a planet at a certain speed, would this object stay orbiting around the planet or would it shoot off into space? And does it depend of the speed the object when it ...
ava's user avatar
  • 31
0 votes
1 answer
124 views

Lorenz System in reference to Astrophysics / Planetary orbits

From my research I have found that there are a system of ordinary differential equations for atmospheric convection. What I am seeking are any Lorenz equations that apply to any areas of Astrophysics ...
Mathematica's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
66 views

Validity of the two-body system approximation in astrophysics

I'm taking an intro course in astrophysics and studying Kepler's Laws of planetary motion - all of which are built over the assumption that we can approximate our system to one where there's only two ...
Rye's user avatar
  • 548
3 votes
2 answers
395 views

How Can I Calculate the Speed Required for an Orbiting Planet to Pass Through a Given Point in Space?

I've been trying to derive an equation for this for a while now, but I haven't had much success. Let us set up the equation. There is a star with mass $M$ and a planet that is distance $d$ from the ...
overlord's user avatar
  • 131
1 vote
1 answer
82 views

Why are planet's maximal/minimal angular speed ratio harmonic?

See this Wikipedia page for Harmonices Mundi, a book by Kepler (yes, he was the one to discover the three Kepler's laws). The author writes: He found that the difference between the maximum and ...
Ma Joad's user avatar
  • 1,335
0 votes
1 answer
66 views

Motions of planets from a non-rotating earth frame

Suppose you are hovering just above the earth at a fixed distance such that you are not rotating with it (the earth is obviously rotating about its own diametrical axis) but you are orbiting the sun ...
ramseysdream111's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
285 views

Where does the radial velocity component come from?

Any object under the influence of a central force will have two components of velocities: Radial and rotational I understand that the rotational velocity is there due to the centripetal force. But ...
Swaroop Joshi's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
72 views

Can dark matter explain the unusual orbit of transnettunian objects? [closed]

While we are struggling to find an hypothetical planet 9 to explain the unusual orbit of transnettunian objects, I was wondering if it could be just dark matter. We know that the universe is mostly ...
Stefano Balzarotti's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
148 views

Is space-time fabric around Uranus tilted?

I am completely new in this field, so please pardon me if I am asking something which makes no sense at all :) The Situation: According to Einstein's theory of relativity, there is a 4th dimension ...
Sourish Dutta's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
98 views

Do all the planets in our solar system orbit the sun in the same direction and in the same plane?

Do all the planets in our solar system orbit the sun in the same direction and in the same plane? (as in a flat orbit if you are looking from "above")
Gabi altigabi's user avatar

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