Calculating Orbital Radius for Geosynchronous Satellite Using Kepler's Third Law

  • Thread starter Thread starter tchouhan
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Law
AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on using Kepler's Third Law to calculate the orbital radius of a geosynchronous satellite. Participants emphasize the importance of consistent units when comparing the orbital periods and distances of the Moon and the satellite. The Moon's orbital period is given as 27 days and its distance as 60 Earth radii, while the satellite's period is 84 minutes. To find the geosynchronous orbit radius for a 1-day period, it is crucial to convert all time periods to the same unit, either days or minutes. Ultimately, the key takeaway is that maintaining consistent units allows for accurate calculations of orbital characteristics.
tchouhan
Messages
8
Reaction score
0
Hello everyone, I'm in a beginner physics class at uni, and after going through this problem over and over, I figured I'd make an account and ask for help since I might be here often.

Homework Statement



The Moon's distance from Earth is approximately 60 Earth radii, and it takes the Moon 27 days to orbit Earth. A satellite just above Earth's atmosphere orbits in 84 min. Show that these data are consistent with Kepler's third law T^2≈R^3. What radius orbit is required for a satellite to have a period of exactly 1 day? (Such an orbit is called geosynchronous).



Homework Equations



T^2≈R^3,

The Attempt at a Solution



I found the orbital radius in astronomical units, it's ##0.17614## AU. I think I'm confused as how to figure out the orbital radius for the satellite. I always get very large numbers, because 1 AU is equal to ~24,000 Earth radii. I don't understand how to show this relationship because I can't even understand it myself! Could someone walk me step by step? I think I am to show the orbital radius of the Moon in Earth radii, but it's ##4135.95## ER, which seems far too large.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Bag astronomical units. You are dealing with objects close to the earth.

Set up a ratio using Kepler's Third Law.

You are given for the Moon: T = 27 days, R = 60 Re, where Re = radius of the earth

For the satellite in low Earth orbit: T = 84 min, R is roughly Re, since the atmosphere is relatively thin

Obviously, some units will have to be converted to make a proper ratio.

Then, for the satellite in geosynchronous orbit, T = 1 day, but R = ?

Have a go at this approach.
 
I'm mostly confused as to what units go with which. ##27/365.25## would give me the time in years.

But then what do I convert the Earth radius to? Miles? Kilometers?

And for the last part, ##1/365.25## which I then square gives me ##0.00273##. What is this number? Miles? KM?
 
For ##T^2 \propto R^3 ##, units do not matter, as long as you use the same units in both cases. That is, you can use, for example, minutes for both the satellite and the Moon, and the Earth's radius for both the satellite and the moon.
 
Try using time in days, distance in Earth radii. Then it's just a matter of figuring out what 84 minutes is in units of days and grinding through some simple math. You'll get an answer in Earth radii, which is consistent with the units used in the two given values.
 
You're not seeing the big picture. As long as you use consistent units for your ratio, you'll be OK.

For the moon, the period is in days. For the satellite, the period is in minutes. See the mismatch in time units? To be consistent, express all periods in days or minutes, one or the other.

The units of the ratio are immaterial. You want to take a known ratio for one orbital situation so that you can find the unknown component in a second orbital situation.
 
Alright, I've got it figured out. Thank you everyone, the conversions were going right over my head.
 
Back
Top