Determine Jupiter radius based on graviational acceleration at surface

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves calculating the radius of Jupiter based on the gravitational acceleration at its surface, which is given as 2.36 times that of Earth's gravity. The context includes the orbital characteristics of Jupiter's moon, Europa, specifically its orbital period and distance from Jupiter.

Discussion Character

  • Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the relationship between gravitational force and centripetal force, questioning how to equate these to find Jupiter's radius. There are attempts to clarify the equations involved and the implications of the gravitational acceleration provided.

Discussion Status

Some participants have offered hints and guidance regarding the equations needed to approach the problem, while others express confusion about specific steps and the meaning of variables. Multiple interpretations of the equations are being explored, particularly regarding the mass of Jupiter and the definitions of angular versus linear velocity.

Contextual Notes

There are mentions of potential typos in the equations and the need for additional information, such as Jupiter's mass, which is not directly provided in the problem statement. Participants are also grappling with the implications of the gravitational acceleration on the calculations.

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1. The problem:
The moon Europa, of the planet Jupiter, has an orbital period of 3.55 days and
an average distance from the center of the planet equal to 671,000 km. If the
magnitude of the gravitational acceleration at the surface of Jupiter is 2.36
times greater than that on the surface of the Earth, what is the radius of
Jupiter? (Hint: begin by calculating the rotation speed.)


2. Homework Equations
F=GMjMm/R^2

v=2piR/T

3. The Attempt at a Solution

Not sure at all. I guess, the centripetal force of the mon Europa has to be equal to the gravitational force. MeV^2/R=GMeMj/R^2, but then I am not sure what to do with the given gravitational acceleration of Jupiter and how to get the r-radius of jupiter.

I appreciate any help.
 
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This is sort of a two step problem.

Step 1.)
Look at the first relevant equation (which appears to have a typo of one too many masses, but anyway...)
The right side of that equation has Jupiter's radius in it, which is the thing you want to solve for. Given that on Jupiter's surface the acceleration is 2.36 g, what can you write the left side of the equation as? (Hint: If you were on the surface of the earth, what would you write it as? How does this change on Jupiter?)

Step 2.) Hint: You'll need to use the info given about Jupiter's moon to calculate the piece of information you aren't directly given for the resulting equation in step 1. That's where you use the info from your suggested solution...
 


pastro said:
This is sort of a two step problem.

Step 1.)
Look at the first relevant equation (which appears to have a typo of one too many masses, but anyway...)
The right side of that equation has Jupiter's radius in it, which is the thing you want to solve for. Given that on Jupiter's surface the acceleration is 2.36 g, what can you write the left side of the equation as? (Hint: If you were on the surface of the earth, what would you write it as? How does this change on Jupiter?)

Step 2.) Hint: You'll need to use the info given about Jupiter's moon to calculate the piece of information you aren't directly given for the resulting equation in step 1. That's where you use the info from your suggested solution...

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thank you pastro.
Step 1. 2.36g=G/r^2 ?

I found a solution to this problem in one of the previous posts, but there are few things I do not understand.

Solution:
radius of orbit of Europa, rm = 671000km
rotational period of Europa, T = 3.55 days
Acceleration due to gravity on Jupiter = GM/r² = 2.36g
radius of Jupiter, r = ?

2. Homework Equations
Rotational velocity of Europa, ω = 2π/(3.55*86400) radians/second - WHY IS THERE NO 'r' v=2πr/T
Centripetal acceleration, a =rmω² - ISN'T IT a=v^2/r?
3. The Attempt at a Solution

Gravitational acceleration on Europa
=GM/(rm)²
=(GM/r²)*r²/(rm)² - I DO NOT UNDERSTAND WHAT HAPPENS HERE/WHERE THIS EQUATION COMES FROM =(2.36g)(r/rm)²

Equating gravitational acceleration with centripetal acceleration,
(2.36g)(r/rm)² = rmω²
r=(rm)³ω²/(2.36g)
=74,038 km

Could somebody please explain. I am trying to understand. Any help.
 
Last edited:


Step 1. 2.36g=G/r^2 ?
Perform dimensional analysis and you'll see you're still missing something. Should be:
2.36g = GMJ/r2

So you need to know the mass of Jupiter, which is the unknown quantity I referred to before.

Rotational velocity of Europa, ω = 2π/(3.55*86400) radians/second - WHY IS THERE NO 'r' v=2πr/T

ω is the angular velocity, not the linear velocity. In this case, you can think of angular velocity as the angle through which an object rotates divided by the time it takes to rotate through that angle. Since you are given the period (which means a rotation by 2π = 180 degrees), then ω is as you show.

Note that linear velocity is related to angular velocity by the relationship v = ω r, which I use to answer your next question.

Centripetal acceleration, a =rmω² - ISN'T IT a=v^2/r?

This is a bit confusing, be cause you use rm, which appears to stand for "Jupiter-moon distance," not r m = distance times mass. Anyway, I'll make this distance rm to avoid confusion.

v = ω rm, so a = v2/rm = (ω rm)2/rm = ω2rm
 

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