Gravitation, neutron starlooks simple

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the physics of neutron stars, specifically focusing on the conditions required for material on the surface to remain in place given its rapid rotation. The original poster presents a problem involving a neutron star with a specified radius and rotational velocity, seeking to determine the minimum mass necessary for gravitational stability.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to convert rotational velocity to translational velocity and applies the escape speed formula to find the minimum mass. Some participants suggest equating gravitational attraction to centripetal force to approach the problem differently.

Discussion Status

The discussion has progressed with participants providing alternative approaches to the problem. There is a sense of clarification as one participant confirms understanding after receiving guidance on setting equations equal to each other. However, the original poster's initial confusion indicates that the topic is still being explored.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working within the constraints of a homework problem, which may limit the information available and the methods that can be employed. The original poster expresses frustration with their progress, highlighting the challenges faced in solving the problem.

rdn98
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A neutron star is formed when a star has burned all its nuclear fuel and begins to collapse in upon itself. It then packs roughly the mass of our Sun into a region with the same radius as that of a small city while continuing to spin at very rapid rate. Let's say you have a neutron star with a radius of 13 km and rotational velocity of 103 rotations per minute.

---------------------------------------------------------------------a) What is must be the minimum mass so that the material on its surface remains in place?

First thing I did was convert rotational velocity to translational velocity.
so (103 rev/min)(2pi/1rev)(1min/60secs)*13000m= A (lets just keep it simple for now)

Well, I want the minimum mass, so I looked into the gravitatin chapter, and the only thing that pops out at me is the escape speed formula

v=sqrt(2*G*M/R)
where G is the gravitation constant
M is my variable
and R is my radius.

So I plugged in my velocity, and solved for M, but its not working out right. Am I missing something here, or am I on the right track? *sigh* Too much time wasted on this problem..lol
 
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You should be trying to set the gravitational attraction between a test mass on the surface of the planet and the planet equal to the centripetal force of that test mass given the rotational velocity of the planet.
 
Sorry, you lost me for a second.

Are you saying setup the gravitation attaction equation equal to the centripetal force equation?

So (G*Me*m)/R^2=Me*v^2/R ?
 
Not quite. I was thinking you should set

\frac{GmM_n}{R^2} = \frac{mv^2}{R} = m\omega^2R

and solve for Mn, the mass of the neutron star. This applies to a mass on the equator of the star.
 
Thank you so much man. I figured it out. Now I can rest easily.
 

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