Mass/escape velocity of a comet

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on calculating the escape velocity and potential energy of debris from Comet Tempel 1, specifically after the Deep Impact mission on July 4, 2005. The escape velocity equation, 1.0 m/s = sqrt((2*G*M)/4500 m), leads to a mass of 3.4 x 10^13 kg for the comet. The kinetic energy at the surface is calculated as 1.7 x 10^13 J, with 90% of this energy converted into potential energy as the debris ascends. The conservation of energy principle is emphasized, indicating that the potential and kinetic energies of the escaping debris must balance out.

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Homework Statement


On July 4, 2005, the NASA spacecraft Deep Impact fired a projectile onto the surface of Comet Tempel 1. This comet is about 9.0 km across. Observations of surface debris released by the impact showed that dust with a speed as low as 1.0 m/s was able to escape the comet.
How far from the comet's center will this debris be when it has lost 90 % of its initial kinetic energy at the surface?

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



The equation for escape velocity can help determine the mass: 1.0 m/s = sqrt((2*G*M)/4500 m), M = 3.4 x 10^13.

KE at the surface = (1/2)(3.4 x 10^13)(1.0)^2 = 1.7 x 10^13 -- 90% of that is 1.53 x 10^13 J. So 90% of the kinetic energy has been converted into potential energy, right? Potential energy is (GMm)/r... but then I have two unknowns (m & r). How do I solve this? Is there another equation that can make the m cancel?
 
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If you believe in conservation of energy, the potential and kinetic energies of an escaping object will always add to zero. So when an object has lost 90% of it's initial kinetic energy...

(1-0.90)\frac{1}{2}mv_e^2 + \frac{-GMm}{x} = 0

Hopefully that helps.

Also, there's a couple of things I would like to say about your attempt at a solution.

1) "KE at the surface = (1/2)(3.4 x 10^13)(1.0)^2 = 1.7 x 10^13" Not quite. That's the kinetic energy of the entire comet if it was moving at 1.0 m/s, not the initial kinetic energy of the dust.

2) "So 90% of the kinetic energy has been converted into potential energy, right?" Yes, in a sense. The dust loses kinetic energy in it's effort to do work against the force of gravity. While doing this work, the gravitational potential energy increases (gets less negative) so in a sense the kinetic energy is being converted into potential energy.

3) "Is there another equation that can make the m cancel?" If you use the hint I gave you, this will end up happening.
 

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