Kepler's Laws: Definition & Equations

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Kepler's Laws describe planetary motion, stating that planets orbit the Sun in elliptical paths, sweep equal areas in equal times, and relate the cubes of their distances from the Sun to the squares of their orbital periods. The second law is known as the "Law of Areas," while the third law, or "Harmonic Law," is most accurate when the Sun's mass is significantly greater than that of the planets. Adjustments to the third law account for the masses of both the Sun and the planets. These laws, combined with Newton's insights on gravitation, led to the formulation of the inverse-square law of gravitation. Understanding Kepler's Laws is essential for grasping the fundamentals of celestial mechanics.
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Definition/Summary

I. Each planet moves in an ellipse which has the Sun at one of its foci
II. The radius vector of each planet passes over equal areas in equal intervals of time.
III. The cubes of the mean distances of any two planets form the Sun are to each other as the squares of their periodic times.

Equations

\frac{a_1^3}{a_2^3} ~::~\frac{P_1^2}{P_2^2}

Extended explanation

The Second law is also known as the "Law of areas"

The Third law is also known as the "Harmonic law"

The Third law is only approximate and only closely holds if the Sun is vastly more massive than the planets.

If is not, then the relative masses of the Sun and planets must be taken into account and the relationship becomes:

\frac{a_1^3}{a_2^3} ~::~\frac{P_1^2(M+m_1)}{P_2^2(M+m_2)}

where M is the mass of the Sun and m1 & m2 are the masses of the respective planets.

Newton's law of gravitation:

Kepler's laws combined with centripetal acceleration (-\omega^2r) enabled Newton (and others) to obtain the inverse-square law of gravitation:

Kepler: \omega^2 :: 1/T^2 :: 1/r^3

Newton: F :: \omega^2r :: r/r^3 = 1/r^2

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