What is the fundamental reason for the elliptical shape of orbits?

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In summary: I think? Anyway, I think it's pretty self explanatory.In summary, Kepler's problem for Coulomb potential admits either hyperbolic or elliptical trajectories.
  • #1
cj
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Why are orbits elliptical?
Any ideas?
 
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  • #3
If they were round, a better question would be "Why are they round?"

Round is a state of perfection, and nothing is perfect.

But, most orbits in our solar system are close to circular.

Pertabutions from the other planets is one of the main reasons that planets can never achieve a perfectly circular orbit.
 
  • #4
Nope.Kepler's problem for Coulomb potential admits either hyperbolic or elliptical trajectories.

Daniel.
 
  • #5
pick up a standard astronomy text and find out =] eg Carroll and Ostlie
 
  • #6
Providing for the possibility is one thing; seeing why is another.

Again, why are some (all in our solar system) planet's
orbits elliptical?

dextercioby said:
Nope.Kepler's problem for Coulomb potential admits either hyperbolic or elliptical trajectories.

Daniel.
 
  • #7
neurocomp2003 said:
pick up a standard astronomy text and find out =] eg Carroll and Ostlie

I guess if I had access to an astronomy text, I'd do just that.

I guess this is one reason why discussion boards exist.
 
  • #8
:frown:
dextercioby said:
Nope.Kepler's problem for Coulomb potential admits either hyperbolic or elliptical trajectories.

Daniel.

I don't understand the "nope" part . But I agree with the rest.

I imagine you're responding to my post.

It's kinda the point I was trying to make. Everything is either hyperbolic or elliptical because circular or parabolic are perfect conditions that only exist on paper. If you think you have a perfectly circluar orbit, try expressing its eccentricity accurate to 15 digits. :eek:
 
  • #9
So it's the gravitational effect from other planets that
cause this deviation from perfection?


tony873004 said:
:frown:

I don't understand the "nope" part . But I agree with the rest.

I imagine you're responding to my post.

It's kinda the point I was trying to make. Everything is either hyperbolic or elliptical because circular or parabolic are perfect conditions that only exist on paper. If you think you have a perfectly circluar orbit, try expressing its eccentricity accurate to 15 digits. :eek:
 
  • #10
Here's the eccentricy

[tex] \epsilon=\sqrt{1+\frac{2EM^2}{m\alpha^{2}}} [/tex]

,where

[tex] U_{C}=-\frac{\alpha}{r} [/tex]

Daniel.

P.S.U judge from that formula what the eccentricity may be.
 
  • #11
look up kepler's proof for the eccentricity of planetary orbit online. Its like a 1-2page proof.

Some things to consider.
[1] Gravitation of other planets(i think this is minimal if my memory serves me right)
[2] When the Object started orbiting a particular point.
If the point(axis) of rotation is not directly in the center than the orbit will not be perfectly circular...the sun is not located in the center of Earth's rotation.
 
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  • #12
  • #13
If you take the idealized case of one gravitating star and one planet of negligible mass compared to the star, with an arbitrary direction and speed for initial condition, the orbit is a conic section with the star at one focus, no other perturbations required. The fundamental reason is that the inverse square law of gravitation is a recirocal quadratic, and a reciprocal quadratic relationship in polar coordinates generates a conic section. To see this, convert the focus-directrix definitions of the conic sections to polar coordinates with the origin at the focus.
 
  • #14
cj said:
So it's the gravitational effect from other planets that
cause this deviation from perfection?
No. They would be elliptical even without other planets.

An orbit has two components: orbital speed and radial distance. The only way you would get a circular orbit is of these two (otherwise independent) values were just right.
 
  • #15
People often rag on the fact that planetary motions aren't circular, that they're really elliptical, but even the latter is not really true. Truth is, the planetary perturbations are extremely complicated and the resulting shape of the orbit is not an ellipse. In fact, when doing high-precision orbit determination, we actually express the eccentricity as a function of time, implying that the shape of the orbit is not described by a single ellipse. In addition, the orbits precess, implying that the orientation of the "ellipse" is also changing with time.

It really just depends on how precise you need to be. For many cases, it's perfectly alright to approximate a planet's orbit as circular. In others, you may want to approximate it as an ellipse (as Kepler did), and in others you'll need to go to higher order (as Einstein did with Mercury).
 
  • #16
There is still no clear and concise answer to the original question though.
 
  • #17
amt said:
There is still no clear and concise answer to the original question though.

I thought my answer in post #13 was concise. Perhaps it wasn't clear? The conic section/focus property falls out of simultaneously satisfying the conservation of angular momentum and the inverse square law of gravity. This is essentially what Newton showed in the first 13 propositions of his Principia.
 
  • #18
Many good technical arguments... and correct. The 'picture' explanation is that orbits circle the center of mass of the system. But the complicating factor is the center of mass of any system moves as the bodies move. Under GR, this introduces a dragging effect. If you trace out a path that conserves momentum [with respect to the center of mass] over time, you get an ellipse [in a euclidean coordinate system].
 
  • #19
This may be wrong, but here's how I imagine it:
The sun provides a certain centripital force with its gravity, which changes depending on your distance. If a planet comes along and it is moving with a certain velocity and has a certain mass, you could do the math and figure out the radius of the circle it would move in...if it did move in a circle that is. For a certain specific velocity and mass of a planet, there is only ONE radius that has the exact centripital force to keep it moving in a circle around the sun. However what if as it approaches the sun, the radius is slightly larger than what it should be for a circular orbit? Imagine the planet moving in a straight line. As is passes the sun, it gets pulled sideways towards the sun slightly, but not enough to hold it in a circular path. So now it is slowly picking up velocity in the direction perpendicular to its original path - in addition to its original velocity. Right as the planet passed the sun, the pull of gravity was perpendicular to its direction, so it couldn't slow the planet down. As it moves away, the angle becomes smaller, and the sun beings to slow the planet down and eventually stop it and reverse direction. Now it is being accelerated towards the sun, and its sideways velocity is slowing. Now that I've tried, it's a little hard to put into words, but it makes perfect sense to me. Draw it out on paper, draw the sun and draw a circular orbit path. Now start with a radius a little larger and same velocity, now just imagine the forces that the sun is applying on the planet.
 
  • #20
Thanks spacetiger, that's an interesting perspective, and not one I've really heard before.
 
  • #21
An ellipse is a 2D circle that is rotated. If you attempt to translate such an ellipse into its circle equivalent a vector force, which happens to be G, drops right into your lap [ok, with some minor GR corrections].
 
  • #22
Chronos said:
An ellipse is a 2D circle that is rotated. If you attempt to translate such an ellipse into its circle equivalent a vector force, which happens to be G, drops right into your lap [ok, with some minor GR corrections].
Sounds interesting. Do you happen to have a link or know of a text that goes into detail on this?
 
  • #23
There is also a simpler explanation. While a perfectly circular orbit between mass possesing bodies is a physical impossibility, almost perfectly circular orbits can be achieved in 2 body systems. There are two kinds of stable orbits - elliptical and circular. To achieve a circular orbit, the initial momentum of both bodies must be finely tuned. The parameters for elliptical orbits are much more forgiving.
 
  • #24
I always looked at it a similar way - since there is only one circular orbit for a given system (two bodies and a distance) and there are an infinite number of elliptical ones, probability alone says there is an infinitessimally small chance of a circular orbit...

...With one caveat: if an elliptical orbit were unstable and somehow "decayed" into a circular one, then circular ones would exist/be prevalent. But elliptical orbits are stable.
 
  • #25
What people seem to have overlooked in this thread is that a circle is a conic section as well, where there is no eccentricity. Give the circle eccentricity (or slant the plane which cuts through the cone) and it becomes an ellipse. Even more, and we start getting parabolic and hyperbolic shapes.

The reason why the planets have a slight eccentricity is due to minor effects in the gravity of other planets (as said by others) but also due to the rectilinear movement of a planet at its formation. Also, large impacts of comets can cause the planet to deviate in its orbit, causing more eccentricity in its orbit round the sun.
 
  • #26
Trying once more. The general quadratic in two variables, such as x and y, is a conic section. As Symbreak says, these consist of ellipses and hyperbolas with circles and intersecting lines as special cases. Given a massive body like the sun, regarded as at rest, and a planet with any instantaneous velocity relative to it, the future orbit will be in the plane of that velocity and the COG of the bodies (since there's no force acting normal to that plane), Given any x-y coordinate system in that plane, a quadratic equation will result from the law of gravity and conservation of angular momentum. The solution, path of the planet, will be some conic section, but there is no reason to suppose it will be the special case, a circle. That will only happen if the initial velocity vector happens to be exactly at right angles to the radius vector from the sun to the planet, and its speed is exactly the circular speed for the distance of the planet from the COG.

So the orbit will be an ellipse or a hyperbola, but if it is a hyperbola the planet will fly off on it into outer space and never return. So the only class of stable solutions are the ellipses. Note that the influence of other planets has not entered at all. In fact they do not serve to form ellipses but to destroy their stability by causing rotation of the axes and off-plane forces.
 
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  • #27
Symbreak said:
What people seem to have overlooked in this thread is that a circle is a conic section as well, where there is no eccentricity. Give the circle eccentricity (or slant the plane which cuts through the cone) and it becomes an ellipse. Even more, and we start getting parabolic and hyperbolic shapes.

The reason why the planets have a slight eccentricity is due to minor effects in the gravity of other planets (as said by others) but also due to the rectilinear movement of a planet at its formation. Also, large impacts of comets can cause the planet to deviate in its orbit, causing more eccentricity in its orbit round the sun.
This is not the reason for eccentricity. I'll try to prove this more formally. Not axiomatically or anything, but just a good convincing argument.
Assuming the sun is much larger than the planets so that it remains stationary, and that the force of gravity varies inversly as the square of the didtance and directly as the product of the mass of the sun and the planet, and that the sun is the only body exerting a force on the planet, the orbit will be an elipse.
Proof:
Put the sun at the center of a coordinate system. The sun exerts a force directly toward itself, so the torque is zero, implying that the angular momentum of the planet is constant. Introduce the position vector of the planet, [itex]\vec{r}[/itex], and the veloctity vector, [itex]\vec{v}=\frac{d\vec{r}}{dt}[/itex]. Introduce the unit vector, [itex]\vec{i}[/itex], pointing towards the planets initial position. Defeine [itex]\vec{j}[/itex] perpendicular to [itex]\vec{i}[/itex] and lying in the plane spanned by the position and velocity vectors. Define [itex]\vec{k}[/itex] by the right hand rule. Then the angular momentum is equal to [itex]\vec{r} \times m\vec{v} = mh \vec{k}[/itex] for some constant h.

Now, niether the force exerted by the sun nor the initial velocity vector has a component outside of the plane spanned by the intitial position and velocity vectors. Therefore, the orbit lies in this plane. Now consider the area swept out by the position vector as the planet moves over a small interval of time. This area is approximately the area of the triangle between the vectors [itex]\vec{r}[/itex], [itex]\vec{r}+\Delta \vec{r}[/itex] and [itex]\Delta \vec{r}[/itex]. This error in this approximation approaches 0 as [itex]\Delta \vec{r}[/itex] approaches 0. This is exactly half the area of the parralelogram spanned by [itex]\vec{r}[/itex] and [itex]\vec{r}+\Delta \vec{r}[/itex], which is equal to [itex]||\vec{r} \times \Delta \vec{r}||[/itex] The amount of area added over a short period of time, per unit time is then [itex]\frac{1}{2}||\vec{r} \times \frac{\Delta \vec{r}}{\Delta t}||[/itex]. In the limit of [itex]\Delta t\rightarrow 0[/itex], this is [itex]\frac{1}{2}||\vec{r} \times \frac{d\vec{r}}{dt}||=\frac{1}{2}||\vec{r} \times \vec{v}||[/itex], which is the angular momentum. The total area swept out by the postion vector is
[tex]A=\frac{1}{2} \int_{t_0}^{t} r^2 d\theta = \frac{1}{2} \int_{t_0}^{t} r^2 \frac{d\theta}{dt} dt[/tex]
From the fundamental theorum of calculus, the rate at which the vector sweeps ot area is
[tex]\frac{1}{2} r^2 \frac{d\theta}{dt} [/tex]
Equating the two rates for area sweeping, you get:
[tex]\frac{1}{2} r^2 \frac{d\theta}{dt}=\frac{1}{2}||\vec{r} \times \vec{v}||[/tex]
[tex]\rightarrow r^2 \frac{d\theta}{dt}=||\vec{r} \times \vec{v}||[/tex]
The magnitude of the crossproduct is now known. Combining this with our knowledge of its direction, you get:
[tex]\vec{r} \times \vec{v}=r^2 \frac{d\theta}{dt} \vec{k}[/tex]
Now define the unit position vector, [itex]\vec{u}=\frac{\vec{r}}{||\vec{r}||}[/itex]. Since the length of u is constant, it is perpendicular to [itex]\frac{d\vec{u}}{dt}[/itex]. Now:
[tex]\vec{r} \times \vec{v}=r\vec{u} \times \frac{d(r\vec{u})}{dt}[/tex]
[tex]=r\vec{u} \times (r \frac{d\vec{u}}{dt} +\vec{u}\frac{dr}{dt})[/tex]
[tex]=r\vec{u} \times r \frac{d\vec{u}}{dt} +r \vec{u} \times \vec{u}\frac{dr}{dt})[/tex]
Since [itex]r\vec{u} [/itex] and [itex]\frac{dr}{dt}\vec{u}[/itex] are parrallel, this reduces to:
[tex]r\vec{u} \times r \frac{d\vec{u}}{dt}=r^2\vec{u} \times \frac{d\vec{u}}{dt}[/tex]
We also have
[tex]\vec{F}=m \vec{a}= -\frac{MmG\vec{u}}{r^2}[/tex]
Taking the cross product of the acceleration and angular momentum, you get:
[tex]\vec{a} \times (r^2\vec{u} \times \frac{d\vec{u}}{dt})[/tex]
From the formula for the vector triple product:
[tex]=r^2[(\vec{a} \cdot \frac{d\vec{u}}{dt})\vec{u} - (\vec{a} \cdot \vec{u})\frac{d\vec{u}}{dt}][/tex]
[itex] \vec{a}[/itex] and [itex]\frac{d \vec{u}}{dt}[/itex] are perpendicular becuse the the accelerationis parallel to the force, the force is antiparalel to the position vector, and the postion vector is perpendicular to [itex]\frac{d \vec{u}}{dt}[/itex]. Therefore this reduces to:
[tex]=-r^2(\vec{a} \cdot \vec{u})\frac{d\vec{u}}{dt}[/tex]
[tex]=-r^2((-\frac{GM\vec{u}}{r^2}) \cdot \vec{u})\frac{d\vec{u}}{dt}[/tex]
[tex]=GM\frac{d\vec{u}}{dt}[/tex]
Now consider [itex]\vec{v} \times h\vec{k}[/itex] and [itex]GM\vec{u}[/itex]:
[tex]\frac{d(\vec{v} \times h\vec{k})}{dt} = \vec{a} \times h\vec{k} + \vec{v} \times \frac{dh\vec{k}}{dt} = \vec{a} \times h\vec{k}[/tex]
[tex]\frac{d(GM\vec{u}}{dt}=GM\frac{d\vec{u}}{dt}[/tex]
[tex] \vec{a} \times h\vec{k} = GM\frac{d\vec{u}}{dt}, So: \vec{v} \times h\vec{k} = GM\vec{u} + \vec{C}[/tex]
 
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  • #28
Define [itex]\theta[/itex] as the angle between [itex]\vec{C}[/itex] and [itex]\vec{r}[/itex]. Now:
[tex](\vec{r} \times \vec{v}) \cdot h\vec{k} = (h\vec{k}) \cdot h\vec{k} = h^2[/tex]
[tex]\vec{r} \cdot (\vec{v} \times h\vec{k}) = \vec{r} \cdot (q\vec{u} + \vec{C}) = rq + \vec{r} \cdot \vec{C}[/tex]
Therefore, from the vector identity [itex](\vec{A} \times \vec{B}) \cdot \vec{C} = \vec{A} \cdot (\vec{B} \times \vec{C})[/itex]:
[tex]h^2 = rGM + \vec{r} \cdot \vec{C} = rGM + rc \cos{\theta}; c=||\vec{C}||[/tex]
Solving for [itex]\vec{r}(\theta)[/itex]:
[tex]r = \frac{h^2}{GM + c \cos{\theta}}[/tex]
Which we recognize as the equation of a conic section in polar coordinates. Requiring the conic section to be a circle is seen to be equivalent to requiring r to be independent of theta. This will happen if and only if (assuming h is not zero and q is finite) c is zero. c will be zero if and only if [itex]\vec{C}[/itex] is zero. This implies:
[tex]\vec{v} \times h\vec{k} = GM\vec{u} + \vec{C} = GM\vec{u}[/tex]
The cross product is a vector perpendicular to the velocity. Thus, requiring the directions of these vectors to be the same means that the initial velocity must be exactly perpendicular to the the initial postion vector(which makes sense for a circle). [itex]\vec{k}[/itex] was defined to be perpendicular to the velocity, so requiring the magnitudes to be the same gives:
[tex]vhk \sin{90} = vh = GM[/tex]
h was defined as [itex] \vec{r} \times \vec{v} = h\vec{k}[/itex]. Since we must have position and velocity perpendicular for the first condition, this means that h=rv. So:
[tex]v^2r=GM[/tex]
Dividing by [itex]r^2[/itex] gives the fammiliar result for acceleration in circular orbit:
[tex]\frac{v^2}{r}=\frac{GM}{r^2}=\frac{F}{m}=a[/tex]
This is the reason that orbits are eliptical. They must be conic sections due to the 1/r^2 nature of the force. They could not be hyperbolas or parabolas because these are unbounded, while orbits are bounded. And finally, they are not circular because this would require two independant initial conditions to take on certain exact values, making elipses the general case. The beginning of this argument was taken with some modifications from "Calculus and Analytic Geometry" by Stein and Barcellos.
 

1. Why are orbits elliptical?

Elliptical orbits are a result of the laws of gravitation and motion, specifically Kepler's laws. According to these laws, the shape of an orbit is determined by the balance between the gravitational pull of the central body and the velocity of the orbiting object. If the velocity is just right, the orbit will be circular. However, if the velocity is too high or too low, the orbit will be elliptical.

2. Can all orbits be considered elliptical?

No, not all orbits can be considered elliptical. Orbits can also be circular or parabolic. A circular orbit has a constant radius, while a parabolic orbit has an escape velocity and does not loop back around the central body. However, in many cases, elliptical orbits are the most common and can be seen in the orbits of planets, comets, and satellites.

3. How do elliptical orbits affect the speed of an object?

The speed of an object in an elliptical orbit is not constant. The object will move faster when it is closer to the central body due to the stronger gravitational pull, and slower when it is farther away. This is known as Kepler's second law, which states that the line connecting the object to the central body sweeps out equal areas in equal times.

4. Are all elliptical orbits the same shape?

No, not all elliptical orbits have the same shape. The shape of an ellipse is determined by its eccentricity, which is a measure of how elongated or flattened the ellipse is. An eccentricity of 0 represents a perfect circle, while an eccentricity of 1 represents a parabola. The eccentricity of an elliptical orbit can range from 0 to 1, with most orbits falling somewhere in between.

5. Can the shape of an orbit change over time?

Yes, the shape of an orbit can change over time. This is due to external forces such as the gravitational pull of other objects or the effects of atmospheric drag. These forces can cause an object's orbit to become more or less elliptical, eventually leading to a circular or parabolic orbit. This is known as orbital decay and is commonly seen in the orbits of satellites and space debris.

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