Kepler's 3rd Law vs. Newton's second for Satellite

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The discussion revolves around calculating the speed and period of a 1000 kg satellite in a circular orbit 300 km above Earth's surface using both Kepler's Third Law and Newton's second law. The calculations using Newton's law yield a velocity of approximately 7.7 km/s and a period of about 5400 seconds, while applying Kepler's law with an incorrect constant results in an implausible period of 9.4 seconds. Participants clarify that the constant used for Kepler's law was mistakenly taken from a table meant for the Sun, not Earth, and emphasize that the law applies to both circular and elliptical orbits. Correcting the constant to approximately 9.91 x 10^-14 allows for consistent results with Newton's calculations. The discussion highlights the importance of using the correct constants and understanding the applicability of Kepler's laws.
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Homework Statement



We are to place 1000 kg satellite in circular orbit 300 km above Earth's surface...find speed and period...

Homework Equations



F_g=ma_c=\frac{GMm}{R^2}

a_c=\frac{v^2}{R}

Kepler's Third Law and Constant for Earth:

K_E=2.97*10^{-19}s^2/m^3

T^2=K_Ea^3

The Attempt at a Solution



This is all very straight forward, except the values I obtain are not consistent using both methods. I can use Newtons second law for centripetal motion to solve for v obtaining:

v=\sqrt{\frac{GM}{R}}=\sqrt{\frac{(6.67*10^{-11})(5.97*10^{24})}{6.67*10^{6}}}≈7.7*10^3 m/s

R is the Earth radius PLUS the height above the Earth's surface. The period:

T=\frac{2\pi r}{v}≈5.4*10^3 s

If I apply Keplers 3rd law, I have:

T=\sqrt{(2.97*10^{-19})(6.67*10^6)^3}≈9.4 s

I can't tell where I'm going wrong here. The fast orbit is preposterous. My instructor accepted the value on my homework I obtained using second law; but I'm just reviewing the homework and tried the Kepler equation and it doesn't work...it should work though because Kepler's third law can be derived from the inverse square law of orbits.
 
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How did u get the acceleration? Did you include the Earth's radius plus 300km?
 
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Yes, the radius plus the altitude is 6.67*10^6. I didn't calculate the acceleration, just the velocity and then the period. The acceleration is just centripetal.
 
My best guess is that Kepler's 3rd law applies to an elipse (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-major_axis), where as what you're doing is plucking the value of a circular radius directly into Kepler's 3rd law.

Whether I'm right or wrong, I'm equally interested to hear from someone who can explain why.
 
AdkinsJr said:
Kepler's Third Law and Constant for Earth:

K_E=2.97*10^{-19}s^2/m^3
That is the Kepler constant for the Sun, not the Earth.
 
AdkinsJr said:
If I apply Keplers 3rd law, I have:

T=\sqrt{<b>(2.97*10^{-19})</b>(6.67*10^6)^3}≈9.4 s

\text{That shouldn&#039;t be } 2.97*10^{-19}. \text{ Kepler&#039;s 3rd law is }\frac{r^3}{t^2} = \frac{Gm}{4\pi^2}

\text{Rearranging } T = \sqrt{\frac{4\pi^2((6.67*10^6)^3}{(6.67*10^{-11})(6*10^{24})}}

T = \sqrt{4\pi^2((6.67*10^6)^3(4.002*10^{-14})}

T = \sqrt{(6.67*10^6)^3(1.58*10^{-12})}

I think that should cover your mistake
 
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D H said:
That is the Kepler constant for the Sun, not the Earth.

Ok; in my book there is a table "useful planetary data" and I just grabbed it from there. I should have tried calculating it.

Looking at the data though, I see the values are nearly identical for all the planets so I guess the author just took the square of the orbital period and divided it by the cube of the mean distance from the sun to obtain slightly different values of K FROM each planet. I guess the table was just trying to show that you get the same value of K from the periods and mean distances for all planets. I mistook these values as K values for the planets themselves.

If I use 9.91 * 10^{-14} it works out, about 5400 seconds...

My best guess is that Kepler's 3rd law applies to an elipse (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-major_axis), where as what you're doing is plucking the value of a circular radius directly into Kepler's 3rd law.

Whether I'm right or wrong, I'm equally interested to hear from someone who can explain why.

It's valid for circular and elliptical orbits. The equation is the same infact, you just replace the semi major axis "a" with the radius "r."
 
Bread18 said:
<br /> <br /> T = \sqrt{(6.67*10^6)^3(1.58*10^{-12})} <br /> <br /> I think that should cover your mistake
<br /> <br /> I think there&#039;s an error in there, although you&#039;re right about the K value being wrong in my original calculation, I calculated the real value to be something like 9.91*10^{-14}
 
It is likely I made a mistake with it, just did it quickly
 
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