Orbital Velocity: Why Mass Doesn't Matter

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on why the orbital velocity of a satellite is independent of its mass when compared to a much larger body, such as Earth. The key point is that the centripetal force required for orbit equals the gravitational force acting on the satellite, leading to the cancellation of mass in the equation. This means that for small satellites relative to the mass of the body they orbit, their velocities remain consistent regardless of their mass. However, if the satellite's mass is significant compared to the larger body, such as the Moon, its orbital characteristics will differ. Ultimately, the relationship between mass and orbital velocity is nuanced and depends on the mass ratio of the objects involved.
Muhammad Sabih
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why orbital velocity of a satellite is independent of mass?
 
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Have you looked at the maths? Write down the equation for the required centripetal force and for the gravitational attraction that provides it. Equate the two.
 
An "orbit" is just like falling with enough side-ways velocity that you keep "missing" the earth. That does not depend upon mass for the same reason the speed, at any time, of a falling object does not depend upon mass- the gravitational force is a multiple of mass so it cancels out of "F= ma".
 
Muhammad Sabih said:
why orbital velocity of a satellite is independent of mass?
Well, if the satellite's mass is large enough, it's not (independent of mass). For instance, the Moon.
However, if the satellite's mass is something like 1 ten-billionth of the mass of the body it's orbiting, and another satellite's mass is 5 ten-billionths, then you will see negligible difference in their motion about the body.
 
tfr000 said:
Well, if the satellite's mass is large enough, it's not (independent of mass). For instance, the Moon.
However, if the satellite's mass is something like 1 ten-billionth of the mass of the body it's orbiting, and another satellite's mass is 5 ten-billionths, then you will see negligible difference in their motion about the body.
Are you asserting that a small object in the same orbit as the Moon's would orbit at a different speed than the Moon?
 
DaveC426913 said:
Are you asserting that a small object in the same orbit as the Moon's would orbit at a different speed than the Moon?
Well, yes. Newton says the force between them (the Earth and whatever) is proportional to the product of their masses. Therefore, the Moon orbits a little faster, in the same orbit than say, a baseball. A basketball's orbit would not be noticeably different from the baseball's.
What are you saying?
 
DaveC426913 said:
Are you asserting that a small object in the same orbit as the Moon's would orbit at a different speed than the Moon?
Note that two objects orbit their combined center of mass, which for the Earth-Moon system is 4,671 km from the center of the Earth. So a small object will have an orbit around Earth more centered around Earth's center, have a different distance or radius (pick one) and a different speed.
 
DaveC426913 said:
Are you asserting that a small object in the same orbit as the Moon's would orbit at a different speed than the Moon?
Yes. Such an object could orbit as much as ~ 6 m/s slower than the Moon. ( and have a period ~4 hrs longer)
 
Just in case the OP is lost...

If one of the masses (m2) is very small compared to the other (M1) then the maths simplifies to ..

Centripetal force = gravitational attraction

m2v2/r = GM1m2/r2

M2 cancels which is why V is independent of mass.

If m2 isn't small then see the last few posts above.
 
  • #10
russ_watters said:
Note that two objects orbit their combined center of mass, which for the Earth-Moon system is 4,671 km from the center of the Earth. So a small object will have an orbit around Earth more centered around Earth's center, have a different distance or radius (pick one) and a different speed.
Yeah, I thought maybe that was the confounding factor.

I was imagining small objects in simultaneous orbit, ahead of the Moon, being overtaken and swept up by Moon.
 

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