How Does the Meteoroid's Acceleration Change as It Passes Planet Conniption?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the acceleration of a meteoroid as it passes near the planet Conniption, considering various forces acting on it, including gravitational and magnetic forces. The problem involves calculations related to the meteoroid's mass, charge, altitude, velocity, and the planet's characteristics.

Discussion Character

  • Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore relevant equations and forces involved, including gravitational and magnetic forces. There are attempts to substitute these forces into the equation of motion to find acceleration. Some participants express uncertainty about where to begin and the correctness of their vector representations.

Discussion Status

Guidance has been offered regarding the contributions of different forces and the need to consider vector directions. Some participants have made progress in their calculations, while others question the assumptions and the setup of the problem.

Contextual Notes

There is ambiguity regarding the direction of the magnetic field and its effect on the resultant forces, which some participants note may affect the overall calculation of acceleration.

TheSerpent
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1. The meteoroid Perturbation passes near the planet Conniption which has a mass of 5 * 10^25kg, a charge of +10^6 C and has a radius of 10500km. The meteoroid has a mass of 10 tonnes and a charge of +5 C. The meteoriod has an altitude of 9500km and a velocity of 10km/s. The planets magnetic field is 0.001T perpendicular to the meteoroids velocity. Determine the instantaneous acceleration of the meteoroid.
 
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Relevant Equations? Attempt at Solution?
 
Unsure on where to begin!
 
TheSerpent said:
Unsure on where to begin!

Begin with relevant equations. What forces are involved and from what fields?
 
The forces that are involved in this question from what I can tell are gravitational and magnetic.

Some possible relevant formulas are:
Fg = GMm / r^2
Fe = kQq / r^2
Fb = qvBSin(theta)

I think it would be required to substitute these into F = ma to solve for 'a' somehow, but I am not sure.
 
TheSerpent said:
The forces that are involved in this question from what I can tell are gravitational and magnetic.

Some possible relevant formulas are:
Fg = GMm / r^2
Fe = kQq / r^2
Fb = qvBSin(theta)

I think it would be required to substitute these into F = ma to solve for 'a' somehow, but I am not sure.

Okay, that's progress.

Each of those forces will have a contribution to the total force on the mass. Each force will act in a direction that depends upon the nature of the field. That is, each is a vector quantity and you will add the vectors to determine the net force. The acceleration can then be found via [itex]\vec{a} = \vec{F}/m[/itex]
 
mPerturbation = 10 tonnes = 10000 kg
mConniption = 5 * 10^25 kg
charge of Conniption [Q] = +10^6 C
charge of Perturbation [q] = +5 C
rConniption = 10500000 m
altitude Perturbation = 9500000 m
r = rCon + altitPert = 20000000
v Perturbation = 10000 m/s
B Conniption = 0.001 T (perpendicular to meteoroid's velocity)
a = ?

Attempt at solution.

Find instantaneous acceleration:

F = ma
a = F / m
a = ( -Fg + Fe + Fb ) / m
a = [(-GMm/r^2) + (KQq/r^2) + (qvBsin90)]/m
a = [(-(6.67*10^-11)(5*10^25 kg)(10000 kg)/(20000000 m)^2) + ((9.0*10^9)(+10^6 C)(+5 C)/(20000000 m)^2) + ((+5 C)(10000 m/s)(0.001 T)(1))/(10000 kg)]
a = -8.32125 N/kg

Not sure if the vectors are absolutely correct though or if something is out of place.
 
TheSerpent said:
mPerturbation = 10 tonnes = 10000 kg
mConniption = 5 * 10^25 kg
charge of Conniption [Q] = +10^6 C
charge of Perturbation [q] = +5 C
rConniption = 10500000 m
altitude Perturbation = 9500000 m
r = rCon + altitPert = 20000000
v Perturbation = 10000 m/s
B Conniption = 0.001 T (perpendicular to meteoroid's velocity)
a = ?

Attempt at solution.

Find instantaneous acceleration:

F = ma
a = F / m
a = ( -Fg + Fe + Fb ) / m
a = [(-GMm/r^2) + (KQq/r^2) + (qvBsin90)]/m
a = [(-(6.67*10^-11)(5*10^25 kg)(10000 kg)/(20000000 m)^2) + ((9.0*10^9)(+10^6 C)(+5 C)/(20000000 m)^2) + ((+5 C)(10000 m/s)(0.001 T)(1))/(10000 kg)]
a = -8.32125 N/kg

Not sure if the vectors are absolutely correct though or if something is out of place.

You're answer looks okay for the given values, although the problem makes the gravitational force so much larger than the others that it swamps their effects.

I also note that the specification of the magnetic field is ambiguous -- it is directed perpendicular to the velocity of the meteoroid, but that only defines a plane in which the field lines lie, not the direction of the field within that plane. That makes a difference to the direction of the force that results; if the resultant magnetic force did not align with the others you'd have to add their vector components rather than simply sum their magnitudes. Even aligned the magnetic force could be negative rather than positive.
 
Forgot that Fg = -GMm / r^2 so that the - cancel out:

F = ma
a = F / m
a = ( -Fg + Fe + Fb ) / m
a = [-(-GMm/r^2) + (KQq/r^2) + (qvBsin90)]/m
a = [-(-(6.67*10^-11)(5*10^25 kg)(10000 kg)/(20000000 m)^2) + ((9.0*10^9)(+10^6 C)(+5 C)/(20000000 m)^2) + ((+5 C)(10000 m/s)(0.001 T)(1))/(10000 kg)]
a = 83537.5 / 10000
a = 8.35 N/kg

That is probably the final answer.
 

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