Does a Satellite's Velocity Continue to Increase as it Free Falls?

In summary, a satellite is considered to be in free-fall when the only force acting on it is gravity. The acceleration of a free-falling body can change its speed, direction, or both. The direction of the acceleration can be broken down into components parallel and perpendicular to the velocity, and also the same can be done for gravity. This concept can be better understood through the thought experiment of firing a bullet at increasing speeds.
  • #1
Dilawar Ali
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it is said that a settelite is a free falling body. For free falling body its velocity should free continuesly increasing. Is it true? I am confused..
 
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  • #2
It is free falling. The velocity of a free-falling body in a gravitational field should be continuously changing, but not necessarily increasing. The change can be a decrease or a change in direction, not necessarily an increase.
 
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  • #3
but gravitational acceleration is positive when the setelite is falling down, and positive acceleration is only produce when magnitude of velocity is increasing.?
 
  • #4
It doesn't really make sense to think of gravitational acceleration as positive or negative. It is a vector which points towards the center of the earth.

At any point on a satellite's trajectory you can break the acceleration vector into components parallel and perpendicular to the velocity. The parallel component will change the speed and the perpendicular component will change the direction.
 
  • #5
it becomes more confusing for me now
 
  • #6
What is confusing? Do you know what a vector is?
 
  • #7
How about this then:

Free-fall is the same as being weightless. You are weightless if the only force acting on you is the force of gravity. That's it. Directions of velocities and accelerations don't matter.

Whether the satellite is falling exactly towards the planet, flying away from it, going sideways in circles or ellipses - none of it matters. As long as it is under the influence of gravity and only gravity, it's in free-fall.

If you add engines to the satellite and turn them on, or if you add the effects of atmospheric drag, you no longer have just gravity acting on the satellite, and it is no longer in free-fall.
 
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  • #8
DaleSpam said:
What is confusing? Do you know what a vector is?
yeah i know, a quantity which need both magnitude and direction for complete discription
 
  • #9
OK, so velocity and acceleration each are vectors. Each has a magnitude and each has a direction. Their directions may be different. Does that make sense?
 
  • #10
Also, do you know what it means to break a vector into components?
 
  • #11
DaleSpam said:
Also, do you know what it means to break a vector into components?

yeah resolving in vertical and horizontal components
 
  • #12
DaleSpam said:
OK, so velocity and acceleration each are vectors. Each has a magnitude and each has a direction. Their directions may be different. Does that make sense?

yeah when velocity is decreasing the direction of acceleration will be opposite...
 
  • #13
Dilawar Ali said:
yeah resolving in vertical and horizontal components
Exactly. The horizontal component is the component perpendicular to gravity and the vertical component is the component parallel to gravity.

Just like you can break velocity into components parallel and perpendicular to gravity, you could instead break gravity into components parallel and perpendicular to velocity.

Does that idea make sense?
 
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  • #14
DaleSpam said:
Exactly. The horizontal component is the component perpendicular to gravity and the vertical component is the component parallel to gravity.

Just like you can break velocity into components parallel and perpendicular to gravity, you could instead break gravity into components parallel and perpendicular to velocity.

Does that idea make sense?

yeah now i understand a little bit..
 
  • #15
Consider this: Earth's gravitational acceleration has a known value. So if you ignore the perpendicular component of the acceleration (the change in direction), the acceleration you get won't match that known value for any trajectory besides straight down.

[Edit]
Another: if you are "floating" in a spaceship with no sensors and no windows, is there any way to tell if it is in a circular orbit, elliptical orbit, out in empty space somewhere or plummeting toward pancaking onto a planet?
 
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  • #16
Have you ever herd of the thought experiment with the bullet going faster and faster? Imagine firing a gun. The bullet goes really far but hits the ground eventually. If you could make a super powerful gun that fires the bullet really fast, the bullet would still be falling toward the ground, but the curvature of the Earth would come into play (the ground would go "away" from the bullet) and thus the bullet keeps "falling" toward the ground, but we say it's in orbit. The velocity that governs this is given by the eqn:

vorb= (GM/r)^1/2
with G=big G
M= mass of earth
r= radius of earth

If you fire the bullet even faster (vorb*2^(1/2))eventually it will escape the gravitational pull of Earth and go into intergalactic space, never to be seen again (like the satellite voyager).
I hope that helps, I never understood what people meant by things free falling until I learned of this thought experiment.
 
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  • #17
mnmman said:
Imagine firing a gun.



 
  • #18
It might also help to consider the situation with a circular orbit. The satellite is always accelerating perpendicular to it's current direction. For an analogy, imagine driving a car in a circular path at constant speed, the car is always accelerating (centripetal acceleration) but it's speed never changes and the radius of the turn never changes (circular path).
 

1. What is free fall?

Free fall is the motion of an object where only gravity is acting on it, causing it to accelerate towards the ground without any other forces acting on it. This is the same type of motion that objects experience when they are dropped from a height.

2. Is a satellite in free fall?

Yes, a satellite is in a state of continuous free fall. Although it may appear to be floating in space, it is actually being pulled towards the Earth by its gravitational force. However, the satellite is moving horizontally at a fast enough speed that it never reaches the ground.

3. How does a satellite stay in orbit if it is in free fall?

A satellite stays in orbit because of its high velocity and the curvature of the Earth's surface. The satellite is constantly falling towards the Earth, but its horizontal velocity allows it to continually miss the Earth and maintain its circular path around the planet.

4. Why doesn't a satellite fall back to Earth if it is in free fall?

A satellite is able to maintain its orbit because of the balance between its forward velocity and the pull of gravity. As long as its velocity remains constant, the satellite will continue to orbit the Earth without falling back to the surface.

5. Can a satellite stop free falling?

No, a satellite cannot stop free falling unless it is acted upon by an external force. As long as the gravitational force of the Earth is present, the satellite will continue to be in a state of free fall. However, its trajectory and speed can be altered by using thrusters or other means of propulsion.

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