Find eccentricity of orbit given position and velocity

Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the nature of an asteroid's orbit around the Sun based on its position and velocity. The original poster seeks to establish whether the orbit is bound and to describe its shape, using given values for velocity and position.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to use the vis-viva equation and conservation of momentum to find the semi-major axis and perihelion distance. They express concern about the complexity of their approach and question whether they are overthinking the problem. Other participants suggest alternative methods to calculate specific orbital energy directly and inquire about the implications of the asteroid's velocity compared to circular velocity.

Discussion Status

Participants have provided guidance on calculating orbital energy and evaluating the nature of the orbit based on velocity. There is an acknowledgment that the asteroid is in a bound orbit due to negative energy, but the exact eccentricity cannot be determined without additional information regarding the direction of the velocity vector. The discussion explores various interpretations of the results and the implications for the orbit's shape.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that the mass of the asteroid is assumed negligible in energy calculations. There is also a discussion about the need for directionality in velocity to fully resolve the eccentricity of the orbit.

musicure
Messages
10
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



Hey, I need to find whether an asteroid is in a "bound orbit" around the Sun.
Furthermore, describe the shape of the orbit (elliptical or circular).
The only information I have been given is its velocity and position at a random point.

v_o=61m/s
r_o=13.75AU=2.06E12m

I also need to find its orbital energy.

Homework Equations


vis-viva eqn: v^2=GM((2/r)-(1/a))
angular momentum L=mvr
r_p=a(1-e) position at perihelion

The Attempt at a Solution



First i used the vis-viva eqn with my v_o and r_o but a (semi-major axis) is an unknown.
so a=((2/r_o)-(v_o^2)/GM)^-1
a=1.03E12m

Then i used momentum conservation with the observed position and the position at perihelion (where velocity is a maximum)

m(v_o)(r_o)=m(v_p)(r_p)
r_p=(v_o)(r_o)/(v_p) call this eqn 1

I computed the vis-viva eqn at perihelion, and i subbed in eqn 1 and a=1.03E12m

so i got a quadratic:
v_p^2=GM[((2v_p)/(v_o)(r_o))-(1/a)

(v_p)^2 - 2.11E6(v_p)+1.29E8=0

The solutions are 61m/s or 2.11E6m/s.

I used assumed 2.11E6m/s =v_p since it is larger.. and 61m/s is my original velocity.

then i found r_p using eqn 1
r_p=5.9E7m

finally i used the eccentricity eqn e=1-(r_p/a)
however r_p is of order 10^7 and a is of order 10^12, therefore i got e~1.
that implies my orbit is a straight line... so where did i go wrong?
also, this feels like a lot of steps so am i over thinking it??

Oh and for orbital energy I think the equation is E=-GM/2a. is that correct?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
That was a whole lot more work than was needed to answer those questions!

Specific orbital energy is indeed ##-\frac {GM}{2a}## , but it's also ##\frac 1 2 v^2 - \frac{GM} r## . You don't need to find the semi major axis to find the specific orbital energy. Just compute it directly. What's the sign of this result? If it's positive, the comet is on an escape trajectory. If it's negative, it's in a bound orbit.

Regarding the nature of the orbit, what's the circular velocity at 13.75 au? If the comet's speed is something different than this, the orbit can't be circular.
 
Okay thank you.

So I used E=K+U = 0.5v^2 -GM/r to find the orbital energy and I got E=-6.46E7 (joules?)

By the way, do we just assume the mass of the asteroid is negligible in the energy eqn?

So then the asteroid is in a bound orbit since the energy is negative, right?

However, how would I find the circular velocity using just radius? I think the only thing I can compute for circular motion is a=v^2/r...
 
Ohhh would I use v_circular=sqrt(GM/r) ?

then i get v_circular=8035m/s which is much greater than v=61m/s
So that means its an ellipse?
 
The energy is negative, so it's in a bound orbit -- either circular or elliptical. You've correctly found that velocity is not that of circular orbit at that distance, so the orbit isn't circular. That leaves one choice.

Note that if you had been told the velocity was 8035 m/s the answer would have been "not enough information". All that this would tell you is that r=a. The velocity has to be equal to circular orbital velocity and normal to the radial displacement vector to have a circular orbit. You weren't told anything regarding the direction of the velocity vector.

Aside: Since you were not told anything about the direction of the velocity vector, you can't solve for the eccentricity. All you do is find a lower bound on the eccentricity (the upper bound is of course one). In this case, that lower bound is rather large. This is a highly eccentric orbit.
 
Okay, thank you so much for all your help.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 11 ·
Replies
11
Views
3K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
1K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
4K
  • · Replies 32 ·
2
Replies
32
Views
3K
  • · Replies 62 ·
3
Replies
62
Views
8K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
7K
  • · Replies 10 ·
Replies
10
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
3K