DrZoidberg said:
What happens when you are in a spaceship orbiting around Earth and you shoot a bullet out the window right towards earth, i.e. towards Earth's center of gravity, assuming the muzzle velocity is much smaller then the orbital speed of the space ship.
It looks like the bullet should assume a higher orbit then the ship even though you shot it right towards earth. But I'm not sure.
I assume that the spaceship is in a circular orbit.
The velocity of the bullet directly after being fired is somewhat higher than the velocity of the spaceship.
There are two contributions to the total velocity of the bullet directly after firing.
- The velocity it already had as it was onboard the spaceship
- The additional velocity from being fired
As those two velocity components are perpendicular the vector sum is larger than the components.
The bullet will proceed in an elliptic orbit. If the bullet does not hit the Earth then it will continue in its orbit.
Question: will that eccentricly orbiting bullet spend more time at
higher altitude than the spaceship it was fired from, or at
lower altitude?
Apogee is the point of farthest distance from Earth,
perigee is the point of closest approach.
As we know, in an eccentric orbit the orbiting velocity is slower at apogee, and faster at perigee. (For an extreme example compare the orbit of Halley's comet. At aphelion it just crawls, at perihelion it screams though the solar system.)
The slower-at-apogee-faster-at-perigee makes the bullet spend more time outside the spaceship's orbit than inside. Also, the bullet has more orbital energy per unit of mass than the spaceship has. That too is a factor that raises the orbital altitude, making it spend more time outside the space ship's orbit.So in general the answer to your question is yes, I think.
For any pair of orbiting objects you can compare their total orbital energy (the spaceship and the bullet have different mass, so you must compare total orbital energy
per unit of mass) The bullet will have more orbital energy (per unit of mass).
By the way, that is one of the reasons there have been very few spacecraft s that have visited the planet Mercury. You can't just fire rockets and make a blast to Mercury. Like in the example of the bullet if you fire the rockets at the wrong time in the wrong direction you end up
increasing the total orbiting energy.
It's hard to climb to an orbit at greater distance from the Sun, but to descend towards the Sun is just as hard.