Space Elevator Vehicle: Acceleration After Cable Release

AI Thread Summary
A space elevator vehicle traveling at high velocity will continue to slow down after it releases from the cable due to the conversion of kinetic energy into potential energy as it ascends. Although it never fully escapes Earth's gravity, the gravitational pull weakens with distance, resulting in a diminishing rate of deceleration. The concept of escape velocity is crucial, as it defines the speed needed to retain kinetic energy at an infinite distance from Earth. As the vehicle gains altitude, the energy required for each additional meter decreases, leading to a gradual reduction in speed. This discussion highlights the complexities of gravitational effects on objects moving away from Earth.
nuclear tan
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Say you have a space elevator 47000 km* long (well past the point where centripetal acceleration cancels out gravity)

There is a vehicle traveling up the cable with a pretty high velocity, and instead of braking it just shoots off the top. (assume the counter weight allows this)

At the instant the vehicle leaves the cable, itwould be traveling at the magnitude of the normal and tangential velocity... I think.

Would it slow as it escapes Earth's gravity, or has that already been taking care of?


Now I apologize if this is the wrong forum.

This isn't homework, it's just something I have been thinking about.


*fyi I read about this enormous length in a NASA pdf...
 
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Space elevators are very interesting. Could you post a link to the NASA pdf?

Thanks
Matt
 
nuclear tan said:
Would it slow as it escapes Earth's gravity, or has that already been taking care of?
Yes it will continue to slow down.
Every metre higher it gets it gains potential energy - it must pay for this with kinetic energy by reducing it's speed.
As it gets further away the extra energy in going each metre is less (because Earth's gravity is progressively weaker) so the amount of slowing down is less with each metre.

It never leaves Earth's gravity - there is no limit to gravity (it goes on forever) but eventually it reaches a distance where the gravity is so weak that there is very little difference in potential energy at each extra metre and so the rate of deceleration goes to almost zero.

Escape velocity is the speed you would need to start at so that when you got an infinite distance from Earth you would still have some kinetic energy (and hence speed) left.
 
mgb_phys said:
Yes it will continue to slow down.
Every metre higher it gets it gains potential energy - it must pay for this with kinetic energy by reducing it's speed.
As it gets further away the extra energy in going each metre is less (because Earth's gravity is progressively weaker) so the amount of slowing down is less with each metre.

It never leaves Earth's gravity - there is no limit to gravity (it goes on forever) but eventually it reaches a distance where the gravity is so weak that there is very little difference in potential energy at each extra metre and so the rate of deceleration goes to almost zero.

Escape velocity is the speed you would need to start at so that when you got an infinite distance from Earth you would still have some kinetic energy (and hence speed) left.

Ha! Thank you.
 
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