Dale
Mentor
- 36,529
- 15,306
The system doesn’t gain energy. The system doesn’t even gain kinetic energy. That is built into the elastic collision equations.LesRhorer said:No matter what, an interaction between two solid bodies can never result in the system gaining energy
Kinetic energy does transfer from one object to the other.
Changing to a different frame of reference does change the kinetic energy.LesRhorer said:Changing to a different frame of reference never has any effect whatsoever to the internal energy of any system.
100% exactly true. This is the principle of relativity. Are you denying the principle of relativity? It is a bedrock of physics.LesRhorer said:Not exactly true.
In the frame of the probe the planet is indeed gaining and losing KE. KE is ##KE=\frac{1}{2}mv^2##. As ##v^2## changes so does KE.LesRhorer said:Measuring the velocity of the planet, the probe sees it alternately slowing momentarily to a dead stop and then speeding up to a peak of 20 Km/s. The measurements are perfectly correct, but it does not mean the planet is somehow loosing energy and then gaining it back. It is never gaining or losing energy at all.
No. You did not provide a reference for this false claim. Again, treating a gravitational assist as an elastic collision is well established in the professional scientific literature. This claim is closed unless you provide specific peer reviewed literature references to the contraryLesRhorer said:In a gravity assist, the two smaller bodies ARE ineslatic in the FoR of the planetary barycenter
Last edited: