Speed of Moon without Sun gravity.

In summary: Moon speed (around the Earth) isn't the same with and without Sun'gravitationnal effects.This looks like homework, SpeedofLight. Even if it isn't, you would learn more if you tried to answer this question yourself. Have you tried to do so?No, I haven't tried to do so.I think it would be a lot more helpful if you tried to answer the question yourself.
  • #1
SpeedofLight
11
0
Hello,

My Question is:
What is speed of moon relative to Earth without the gravitational pull of the sun and hence the isolated length of the lunar orbit? :wink:

Thank you.
 
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  • #2
can be approximated as the average distance between apogee and perigee (2 *pi *((a+p)/2 )) / (time of revolution in what? seconds?)

(assuming perigee and apogee are measure as a radius)

I say approximated because it's also moving away at 32mm/year ...
 
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  • #3
Hello d3x0r,
V = 2 * pi * R / T where
R = radius of moon revolution(the average distance between apogee and perigee)=384264 km
T = 27.321661 synodic days = 655.71986 hours
Moon speed (around the Earth) isn't the same with and without Sun'gravitationnal effects.
 
  • #4
This looks like homework, SpeedofLight. Even if it isn't, you would learn more if you tried to answer this question yourself. Have you tried to do so?
 
  • #5
what goes up must come down - 50% of the orbit is slowed by the sun 50% is increased by the sun - so +50%-50%=0%. Are you trying to build a simulation?
 
  • #6
d3x0r said:
what goes up must come down - 50% of the orbit is slowed by the sun 50% is increased by the sun - so +50%-50%=0%.
The effect is not zero.
 
  • #7
sure it is, otherwise for the past thousands of years the moon wouldn't have had the same period - at any given point on the path it's not a constant velocity, but overall, is it a significant amount that the average is not +0 from the sun's gravitation?

And if there wasn't a sun, wouldn't it have to maintain the same average velocity (so the sun would have to disappear at 1 of two particular moments to have it even remotely work)

Actually in retrospect, even then, the moon's orbit would be translated from correct to orbit the Earth alone, so the moon would have to be shifted too... just really not practical to even consider
 
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  • #8
d3x0r said:
sure it is, otherwise for the past thousands of years the moon wouldn't have had the same period ...
The same period as what?

The calculation to determine what the orbital period of the Moon would be ignoring the presence of the Sun is fairly simple. I do not want to say what exactly that calculation is because this looks a homework problem. I have no qualms in saying this: The result of that calculation is not 655.71986 hours.
 
  • #9
the moon makes 360 degrees around Earth with respect to stars the Earth-moon system moves 26.92952225 degrees around the sun.We can calculate ø from the period of one heliocentric revolution of the Earth-moon system (365.2421987 days):
ø = (360 degrees / 365.2421987 synodic days) x 27.32166088 synodic days = 26.92952225 degrees. So,the speed of moon without Sun gravity should be like this:
V = (2 * pi * R / T)*cos[26.92952225]
Is this CORRECT?
 
  • #10
No.

Assuming no other bodies are present, Newton's law of gravity yields an equation for the period of a pair of bodies orbiting their common center of mass. You need to use that equation.
 
  • #11
I was reading this website: Crackpot link deleted
and I found that the Moon would revolve around the Earth at 3279 km/h without Sun influence on Earth-Moon system. Tell me what do you say with this?
 
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  • #12
I would say nonsense. The calculation is easy. Try it.
 
  • #13
They wanted to isolate Earth-Moon system from solar system because since it revolves around the Sun it has an acceleration thus is no more a inertial frame of reference, so by isolating it, measured speed of moon would be equals to C according to Special Relativity.
 
  • #14
You are referring to a crackpot website. There is no calculation there, no measurement. Just complete nonsense.

Try the calculation. It is not hard.
 
  • #15
Three body problem. The easy way is to subtract tidal influence of the sun from the moon - doh, you get DH's solution!
 
  • #16
With out the sun's gravity?

Can't you just treat it as a one planet system with a sun whose mass is equal to the mass of the Earth and the mass of the planet is equal to the mass of the moon?
 
  • #17
Plebeian said:
Can't you just treat it as a one planet system with a sun whose mass is equal to the mass of the Earth and the mass of the planet is equal to the mass of the moon?
No, you can't. Gravity doesn't work that way in general. You can treat objects with a spherical mass distribution (objects whose density varies only with radial distance from the center of mass of the object) as point masses, but in general you cannot treat an arbitrary collection as a point mass.

Besides, that is not the question raised in the original post. That asked what the period of the Moon's orbit about the Earth would be in the absence of the Sun. That is an easy calculation to make. Since the OP won't do it, here it is:

[tex]P = 2\pi\,\sqrt{\frac {a^3}{G(M_e+M_m)}} = 2\pi\,\sqrt{\frac {a^3}{GM_e(1+M_m/M_e)}}[/tex]

Plugging in the numbers, a=384,399 km, Mm/Me=0.01230004, GMe=398,600.442 km3/s2, yields a period of 27.284500 days. The Moon's synodic period is 27.321582 days, about 53.40 minutes longer than the value calculated assuming an isolated Earth-Moon system.

That 53.40 minute discrepancy is about 0.136% of the true synodic period. Rather small, but very much observable. So what explains this discrepancy? Simple: This calculation ignores the effects of the Sun, which are obviously of a perturbative nature given that the simplistic calculation comes pretty close to the mark.

A frame with its origin at the Earth-Moon barycenter is not an inertial frame. The Earth and Moon are orbiting the Sun. We can pretend it is an inertial frame by accounting for the acceleration of the frame toward the Sun as a fictitious force. With this, the gravitational force exerted by the Sun becomes a tidal gravitational force (physics term) or a third body effect (solar system dynamics term).

The resultant forces will be quite similar to those depicted in this diagram from the wikipedia article on tides. Interpret the arrow as pointing to the Sun and interpret the circle as representing the Moon's orbit about the Earth:
260px-Field_tidal.png


Note that the tidal forces are directed outward when the Moon is new and when it is full. The forces are directed inward when the Moon is at first and last quarters, but the magnitude of this inward force is about half that of the outward force when the Moon is new or full. The net effect is outward, equivalent to a small reduction in the combined mass of the Earth and the Moon. This makes the Earth-Moon period a bit longer than that calculated assuming a two body problem value.
 
  • #18
Hello D H,
if i remove sun gravity and Earth gravity from the moon, what is the equation should I use to find the speed of the moon??(so the moon is walking on straight line.)
Thank you.
 
  • #19
You are asking a nonsense question.
 
  • #20
what is the formula(equation) to find speed of moon while the moon doesn't effected with any gravity?(i want to know what is the orginal speed of moon).
If there is no gravity,then there is no speed ?
if these nonsense questions,sorry...
 
  • #21
The result of an imaginary scenario can be anything you choose to imagine. There is no formula for that.
 
  • #22
The moons orbit is affected by the deceleration and acceleration of the Earth's obit velocity. This shift in velocity causes the apogee and perigee in the moons orbit. But if the suns gravitational pull was not present there would be no way to accurately calculate the mean velocity because velocity shifts would not occur in a predictable formula. the orbit vector can't be attained because the relative position of the moon can't be calculated before the velocity shift occurs in the Earth's orbit velocity. So depending on the position of the Earth and moon when the gravity is no longer present would be the only way to calculate velocity.

TM
 
  • #23
SpeedofLight said:
what is the formula(equation) to find speed of moon while the moon doesn't effected with any gravity?(i want to know what is the orginal speed of moon).
If there is no gravity,then there is no speed ?
if these nonsense questions,sorry...

No need to apologise. It's not at all obvious. In fact, it took the best minds of the world thousands of years to figure this out!

If there was no gravity or any other external force acting on the moon, it's velocity would be constant. This means that it its speed would never change, and nor would the direction it was traveling in.

What would it's speed be? Any fraction of the speed of light you like. If you call it zero, it will stay zero. If you call it half of the speed of light, it will stay half of the speed of light. It's only meaningful to say how velocity changes, or what the difference is between two velocities. There's no objective answer to the question "what is the original speed (or velocity) of the moon".

It's like asking which direction is "up" in space, or which direction is "north" or "forward". We can call any direction we like "up". It doesn't make any physical difference. One direction is as good as another. One velocity is as good as another. They're arbitrary human labels. There's no physical experiment we could do that would tell us which is the best direction to attach the label "up" to, or which velocity is the best to call 0. It's just a matter of convenience.
 
  • #24
Hello Rasalhague,
There are two types of moon's speed:
1) Relative speed to earth, which can be calculated with the following formula:
v = 2 * pi * R / T
where R is radius of moon revolution = 384400 km
and T is the period of moon's revolution = 655.7179 hours
v = 2 * 3.14 * 384400/655.7179 = 3683.377 km/hr

2) Relative speed to star or universe. This is what I need.
In my opinion, the moon makes 360 degrees around Earth with respect to stars the Earth-moon system moves 26.92952225 degrees around the sun. We can calculate ø from the period of one heliocentric revolution of the Earth-moon system (365.2421987 days):
ø = (360 degrees / 365.2421987 synodic days) x 27.32166088 synodic days = 26.92952225 degrees
then V = (2 * pi * R / T)*cos[26.92952225] = speed of moon relative to star or universe.
If this is wrong, please help me to find speed of moon relative to star or universe.
Thank you.
 
  • #25
SpeedofLight said:
Hello Rasalhague,
There are two types of moon's speed:
1) Relative speed to earth, which can be calculated with the following formula:
v = 2 * pi * R / T
where R is radius of moon revolution = 384400 km
and T is the period of moon's revolution = 655.7179 hours
v = 2 * 3.14 * 384400/655.7179 = 3683.377 km/hr

2) Relative speed to star or universe. This is what I need.
In my opinion, the moon makes 360 degrees around Earth with respect to stars the Earth-moon system moves 26.92952225 degrees around the sun. We can calculate ø from the period of one heliocentric revolution of the Earth-moon system (365.2421987 days):
ø = (360 degrees / 365.2421987 synodic days) x 27.32166088 synodic days = 26.92952225 degrees
then V = (2 * pi * R / T)*cos[26.92952225] = speed of moon relative to star or universe.
If this is wrong, please help me to find speed of moon relative to star or universe.
Thank you.
SpeedofLight,

I would call your number 2 the speed of the moon relative to the sun. It needs some work depending on where the moon is in its orbit relative to the sun. You need to take the vector sum of the moons speed relative to the Earth and the Earth's speed relative to the sun.

Next you need to do calculation three and figure out the suns speed relative to the center of the milky way galaxy and do another vector sum.

Finally, you need to find the milky way's speed relative to the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and do a fourth vector sum. Or you can combine steps 3 and 4 and just add in the sun's speed relative to the CMBC.

In layman's terms you could call that the moon's speed relative to the universe.
Note that this speed is not constant, but changes with time in both magnitude and direction.

There are lot's of smart people here who can tell you why that is not quite right, or is at least definition dependent. But it's a reasonable first cut at the speed of the moon relative to the universe. Note also that this is the speed *with* gravity, not the speed *without* gravity. Also it includes not only the Sun's gravity, but other gravitational sources as well.
Best.
Jim Graber
 
  • #26
(1) If you want a slightly bigger challenge on the first question, rather than just average speed, you can calculate the moon’s speed at a particular point on its orbit, using the vis viva equation.

Taking the moon’s current distance from http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/pod.jsp?id=MSP84219d1c35216ihb377000043gf3i5i495496cb&s=54 , I googled

sqrt(G((mass of earth)+(mass of moon))(1/m)(2/364717584-1/384472282)) in km/h

to get 3 882.96569 km/h. A bit faster than your average value, which seems reasonable, since the moon is currently closer than its average distance.

(2) There are some figures relating the movement of sun and Earth to the cosmic microwave background (CMB) here:

The speed of the Sun relative to the CMB is now 1,328,000 km/h (plus or minus 9000 km/h) in the direction of the constellation of the Cup [Crater] (just south of the Lion [Leo]). Contributions 2 - 4 make your speed relative to the CMB up to about 105,000 km/h greater (greatest around 15 December, if my calculations are correct) or smaller (least around 12 June) than the speed of the Sun “relative to the CMB”, mostly depending on the season.

So the speed of the moon about the Earth is a couple of orders of magnitude smaller than the seasonal difference due to differences in the earth’s linear direction of motion, and also somewhat smaller than the uncertainty given here for the sun’s speed relative to a coordinate system where the CMB is isotropic (the same in all directions).

Suppose we have a figure for the moon’s current speed relative to anything. What will it be without gravity? Well, if the only thing we change is to remove gravity, the moon’s speed will be exactly the same until its motion is effected by some other force such as the pressure of the solar wind. If we remove all external forces, its velocity shouldn’t change at all.
 
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  • #27
Hello,
I have similar question: Can we calculate the velocity of the moon relative to EARTH without the gravitational pull of the sun??,or the velocity shouldn’t change at all?(i think this called three-body problem,how to solve these bodies?).
thank you.
 
  • #28
russ_watters said:
The result of an imaginary scenario can be anything you choose to imagine. There is no formula for that.
What he said.
 
  • #29
SpeedofLight said:
Hello,
I have similar question: Can we calculate the velocity of the moon relative to EARTH without the gravitational pull of the sun??,or the velocity shouldn’t change at all?(i think this called three-body problem,how to solve these bodies?).
thank you.
Since the sun has very little effect on the average orbital speed of the moon around the earth, removing it will have very little effect.
 
  • #30
russ_watters said:
Since the sun has very little effect on the average orbital speed of the moon around the earth, removing it will have very little effect.

Thank you, that's what I am looking for!:smile:
 
  • #31
D H said:
What he said.

Hello D H,
you didn't understand me, as i said:

SpeedofLight said:
the moon makes 360 degrees around Earth with respect to stars the Earth-moon system moves 26.92952225 degrees around the sun.We can calculate ø from the period of one heliocentric revolution of the Earth-moon system (365.2421987 days):
ø = (360 degrees / 365.2421987 synodic days) x 27.32166088 synodic days = 26.92952225 degrees. So,the speed of moon without Sun gravity should be like this:
V = (2 * pi * R / T)*cos[26.92952225]
Is this CORRECT?
then you said:
D H said:
No.

Assuming no other bodies are present, Newton's law of gravity yields an equation for the period of a pair of bodies orbiting their common center of mass. You need to use that equation.

I will tell you a simple example:
The velocity vector is defined by the speed and also by the direction of motion. Objects experiencing no net force do not accelerate and, hence, move in a straight line with constant speed: they have a constant velocity. However, even an object moving in a circle at constant speed has a changing direction of motion. The rate of change of the object's velocity vector in this case is the centripetal acceleration.

The centripetal acceleration varies with the radius of the path and speed of the object, becoming larger for greater speed (at constant radius) and smaller radius (at constant speed). If an object is traveling in a circle with a varying speed, its acceleration can be divided into two components, a radial acceleration (the centripetal acceleration that changes the direction of the velocity) and a tangential acceleration that changes the magnitude of the velocity.
So, this formula V = (2 * pi * R / T)*cos[26.92952225] is right,that should find speed of moon without sun gravity from Earth-Moon System(i think the orbit of moon would be very close to circle).
The Speed of Moon Relative to Earth without the gravitational pull of the sun from Earth-Moon System is 3282.9 km/h (roughly).

Thank you.
 

1. What is the speed of the moon without the influence of the sun's gravity?

The speed of the moon without the sun's gravity is approximately 1 kilometer per second.

2. How does the absence of the sun's gravity affect the moon's speed?

Without the sun's gravity, the moon's speed would decrease significantly, making it more difficult for the moon to maintain its orbit around the Earth.

3. Is the moon's speed affected by other factors besides the sun's gravity?

Yes, the moon's speed is also influenced by the Earth's gravity and other celestial bodies in the solar system.

4. Can the moon's speed change over time without the sun's gravity?

Yes, the moon's speed can change due to various factors such as tidal forces, collisions with other objects, and changes in the Earth's orbit.

5. How does the speed of the moon without the sun's gravity compare to the speed of other celestial bodies?

The moon's speed without the sun's gravity is relatively slow compared to other celestial bodies, such as planets and comets, which can reach much higher speeds due to their larger mass and distance from the sun.

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