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rlmurra2
Aug4-05, 12:40 PM
A satellite circles planet Zeron every 98 min. The mass of the planet is known to be 5.0 x 10^4 kg. What is the radius of the orbit?

I don't know what I'm doing wrong, Im using the formula T^2=(4(pi)^2/GM)r^3.......and Im not coming up w/ the right answer, I have like 5 choices to choose from and theire all x10^6...

Astronuc
Aug4-05, 12:56 PM
Balance centripetal force with gravitational force - both are proportional to the mass of the satellite.

Remember the angular frequency, \omega = 2\pi/T, where T is the period.

And tangential speed, v = \omegar

Chi Meson
Aug4-05, 12:56 PM
did you convert the period (T) to seconds?

rlmurra2
Aug4-05, 01:14 PM
I tried converting it to seconds and leaving it in minutes...still the answer is way off.

Doc Al
Aug4-05, 01:39 PM
The mass of the planet is known to be 5.0 x 10^4 kg.
That's an awfully tiny planet. Are you sure of that number?

rlmurra2
Aug4-05, 02:11 PM
Yep, thats what it says in the problem. Are we supposed to use Kepler's third law or whatever to solve this? It seems really easy that way, but when you plug in the numbers, it just doesn't work out.

Doc Al
Aug4-05, 02:16 PM
You can use Kepler's third law, or figure it out for yourself using what Astronuc posted. Either way, you'll get the same answer.

rlmurra2
Aug4-05, 02:23 PM
I've been using Newton's third law all along, and its not working. I'll try again. What is it, just to make sure Im using the right formula???

Doc Al
Aug4-05, 02:32 PM
I assume you mean Kepler's third law. Read about it here: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/kepler.html

rlmurra2
Aug4-05, 02:37 PM
yeah, thats the one im using...wow I really dont think this problem is that hard. even tried it with period in minutes and seconds. oh well thanks anyways

Chi Meson
Aug4-05, 02:57 PM
The period should be in seconds, not minutes. And I agree with DocAl's question: a truck has a mass on the order of 10^4 kg. A planet would not be a planet unless it had a mass of at least 10^20 kg. Methinks there is a typo in your question.