I had this big chart with a bunch of the stats of gravitational acceleration for both planets at certain distances and velocity changes and all that jazz took a while to do on my computer calculator. But alas I had most of it on an Excel chart and blam crashola program not responding, I was on a roll and hadn't saved in a while... My initial obsessive motivation has mostly drained out of me for now. Might pick it up again tomorrow.
I did make a few mental notes though. Two big factors came into play: initial distance between Earth 1 and Earth 2, and time until impact. You have any idea what you want those to look like? Either one would do nicely I assume this is for a story. If not and it's just for your own curiosity I'll just throw something together saying they started like 630,729,000m apart moving at the same speed.
Drakkith said:
I believe the two planets would pull each other towards themselves and eventually both would be falling towards each other at 9.8 m/s^2 right before they hit.
I think at point of impact it would be more like an acceleration of 39.2266 m/s
2 because Earth 2 is accelerating at 19.6133 m/s
2 due to its pull on Earth 1 (9.80665 m/s
2) plus Earth 1's pull on it (9.80665 m/s
2) and at the same time Earth 1 is decelerating at 19.6133 m/s
2 due to the same factors. I could be wrong though.
But regardless the acceleration at point of impact isn't really what matters because you take into account the acceleration due to gravity across the vast distances of space between them and it continually builds up decelerating Earth 1 and accelerating Earth 2 until the impact and at that point it doesn't really matter how snail pace faster Earth 2 was moving or even if Earth 2 was moving slower initially. By the time they collide the impact due to their velocity differential would be quite something. This all of course depends on the initial distance between them.
I was mostly using the equation g
h=g
o(r
e/(r
e+h))
2 and the variations I derived from it would that equation be correct? Or would I have to double r
e because there are two Earths?
g
h= Earth's gravitational acceleration on a object at a distance outside Earth's radius m/s
2
g
o= Earth's standard gravitational acceleration of an object in m/s2 (usually 9.80665m/s
2 but I used both 19.6133m/s
2 and 39.2266m/s
2 to get results due to 2 Earths being present)
r
e= Radius of Earth in meters
h= Distance in meters of object outside of Earth's radius
Oh and all my work is disregarding the whole orbital part I haven't really studied orbital acceleration and orbital factors very extensively yet. Also disregarding spin and the influence of the moons. That's just a bit much for me right now.