Rearranging Formulas for Orbital Velocity and Radius

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The discussion focuses on rearranging formulas related to orbital velocity and radius. The initial equations provided include the relationship between wavelength change and speed, as well as the gravitational relationship linking speed to mass and radius. The first part involves substituting the expression for velocity into the gravitational equation, leading to the formulation of v squared. The participants clarify the steps necessary to isolate r, ultimately arriving at the equation r = GM/((Δλ/λ0)c)². The conversation emphasizes the importance of careful algebraic manipulation to achieve the correct result.
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Homework Statement



(i)
Combine Equations A and B to give a single equation for v and substitute this in place of v in Equation C.
(ii)
Rearrange your answer to part (i) to make r the subject of the equation.

Homework Equations



Equation A
z = Δλ/λ0

Equation B
v = zc

For a planet such as the one orbiting Gliese, the speed v is linked to the mass of the star M and the planet’s orbital radius, by Equation C:

Equation C
v2 = GM/r

G is Newton’s universal constant of gravitation.

The Attempt at a Solution



(i) v = (Δλ/λ0)c -> (Δλ/λ0)c2 = GM/r
(ii) this is where I'm not sure, is the above correct? I always get roots confused.
 
Last edited:
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Are you sure about your result for v^2 in equ. (i)?
It looks like you only squared part of your expression for v.
 
((Δλ/λ0)c)2 = GM/r
 
That looks good to me, now they ask you to rearrange your expression
to make r the subject of the equation. Shall we interpret this to mean solving for r ?
 
Last edited:
((Δλ/λ0)c)2 = GM/r

So do I multiply the r to both sides now or remove the root?

(Δλ/λ0)c = √(GM/r) or ((Δλ/λ0)c)2/r = GM
 
Last edited:
what are you solving for? that will help you decide which direction to take.
 
I'm trying to make r the subject.

((Δλ/λ0)c)2/r = GM

r = ((Δλ/λ0)c)2xGM
 
Your algebra doesn't look quite right.
To this expression: ((Δλ/λ0)c)2 = GM/r

are you sure you multiplied both sides by r ??
 
((Δλ/λ0)c)2 = GM/r

((Δλ/λ0)c)2 x r = GM

totally not sure
 
  • #10
Looks good, you're almost there now.
 
  • #11
so then:

r = GM/((Δλ/λ0)c)2
 
  • #12
well done :approve:
 
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