New Reply

mass of the moon?

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
Dec30-12, 06:53 AM   #1
 

mass of the moon?


hi, i can calculate the distance of moon from the earth and its diameter - but i could't get the formula by which i can calculate the mass of the moon - although i can calculate the mass of the moon by assuming it has same average density that of earth -
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
astronomy news on PhysOrg.com

>> Galaxies fed by funnels of fuel
>> Detection of the cosmic gamma ray horizon: Measures all the light in the universe since the Big Bang
>> Scientists work out way to use pulsars to provide self navigation to spacecraft in solar system
Dec30-12, 08:11 AM   #2
mfb
 
Mentor
The orbital period of the moon depends on its distance and the sum of masses of earth and moon - if you can determine this sum with sufficient precision, you can subtract the mass of earth and get the mass of moon.
Satellites orbiting the moon are a better way to determine its mass - they give direct access to the gravitational acceleration at a specific distance, together with the gravitational constant this can be used to calculate its mass.
Jan2-13, 11:37 AM   #3
 
but how do i calculate the sum of earth and moon mass?
Jan2-13, 11:59 AM   #4
mfb
 
Mentor

mass of the moon?


Measure distance, orbital period and the gravitational constant.

##M+m=\frac{4\pi^2a^3}{GT^2}## with the semi-major axis a (for a circular orbit, this would be the distance)
Jan4-13, 07:28 PM   #5
 
Recognitions:
Gold Membership Gold Member
Homework Helper Homework Help
Science Advisor Science Advisor
I'm curious as to how you calculated the distance between the Moon and Earth. That distance might not be the semi-major axis of the Moon's orbit. It might be the sum of the Moon's semi-major axis and the Earth's semi-major axis, as measured from their combined center of mass. (The 'a' in the previous equation is actually the sum of the semi-major axes, or the distance you most likely calculated.)

In practice, calculating the mass and the semi-major axis of planets was an almost impossible task even after Newton turned Kepler's Third Law into a formula. You had a formula containing three unknown variables (the universal gravitational constant, the mass, and the semi-major axis) and the only known was the orbital period.

In fact, that's why the Earth's semi-major axis for it's orbit around the Sun was measured in astronomical units, with one AU being the distance between the Sun and the Earth. You could measure Jupiter's semi-major axis in AU's, but had no way to convert that into a more traditional measure such as kilometers.
New Reply
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: mass of the moon?
Thread Forum Replies
Mass of man-earth vs moon Introductory Physics Homework 1
Moon Mass Concentrations Astrophysics 1
Center of mass of the earth and the moon Classical Physics 18
Mass of the moon Introductory Physics Homework 4