How Close Does Halley's Comet Get to the Sun?

  • Thread starter Thread starter pinkerpikachu
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Kepler's law Law
Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
3 replies · 6K views
pinkerpikachu
Messages
27
Reaction score
0
1. Halley's comet orbits the sun roughly once every 76 years. It comes very close to the surface of the sun on its closest approach. Roughly how far our from the sun is it at its closest? Is it still 'in' the solar system? What planet's orbit is nearest when it is out there? [Hint: the mean distance in Kepler's third law is 1/2 the sum of the nearest and farthest distance from the sun.

2. (T1/T2)^2 = (R1/R2)^3


Any help is appreciated.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Can you work out the semi-major axis of the orbit? You may want to compare it with the known values of something else that orbits the sun.

Were you given any other info?
 
Did you really mean "at its closest"? Yes, of course Halley's closest approach to the sun is inside the solar system. Otherwise we wouldn't be able to see it! Surely you must mean "farthest".
 
That was the only information given, and yes, i mean the closest.

The mean different is the farthest point in our solar system (relative to the sun), and the closest which IS the sun.

So pluto is the farthest being 5900 X 10^6 km from the sun.

(5900 X 10^6 +0)/2 = 2.95 X 10^6

76 days may or may not have to be converted into seconds

and...that is all I know