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The orbit time would also remain unchanged?
Quote from: Seany on 30/03/2008 22:10:58The orbit time would also remain unchanged?the orbit time of what? The half that went off in one direction would have a different orbit and the other bits would have their own orbits. Earth wouldn't have to change significantly if the event was short lived. The reason I say that is because the force on the Earth would start off as the existing gravitational attractive force and then drop to zero at a huge separation distance. The change of momentum of Earth would be equal to this force times the time it acted for. Less time - less momentum change. For an explosive event, the change would be slight.Imagine trying to drag a magnet across a table with another magnet; if you whipped your magnet away quickly, you couldn't budge it - you'd need to keep your magnet close for a long time and 'tease' the other magnet along. The Moon scenario would be the same sort of idea.
If the earth and moon orbit the sun as one mass, then we got rid of the moon, the mass would have decreased and the earth would then drift away from the sun.
But why would there be plans to blow up the moon with an atomic bomb?
'fraid that's wrong still. Oh ye of little faith!The effect on the motion of a mass depends upon the force and the value of the mass (Newton's second law of motion).In the same way as orbits are independent of mass, objects of low and high mass both fall to Earth at the same rate. (Well know experiment and you can more or less prove it for yourself if your light object is not so light that air resistance starts to have an effect - no feathers).Here's chapter and verse ( you need to wait for A level before they do this at School for you. The Maths is reasonable, though, and is a clincher!!):Centripetal force needed to keep an object in a circular path of radius r at speed v isF(centripetal) = mv*v/r - like a conker on a string.Force attracting it towards the Sun (Sun's Mass = M, G is the Gravitational Constant)F(gravitational) = m*M*G/r*rWhen the object is in a stable orbit, these two forces are equal / balanced, so the object won't move away or towards the Sun, just stay moving in a circle.som*v*v/r = m*M*G/r*rthe m's cancel and so does one of the r's so:v*v = M*G/rre-arrange it to find the radius of orbitr=M*G/v*vm doesn't come into it; all that counts is the speed. This assumes that M is a lot, lot bigger than m, which it is and is the simplest case of a circular orbit - but it applies for elliptical orbits too.
Quote from: sophiecentaur on 01/04/2008 11:54:49'fraid that's wrong still. Oh ye of little faith!The effect on the motion of a mass depends upon the force and the value of the mass (Newton's second law of motion).In the same way as orbits are independent of mass, objects of low and high mass both fall to Earth at the same rate. (Well know experiment and you can more or less prove it for yourself if your light object is not so light that air resistance starts to have an effect - no feathers).Here's chapter and verse ( you need to wait for A level before they do this at School for you. The Maths is reasonable, though, and is a clincher!!):Centripetal force needed to keep an object in a circular path of radius r at speed v isF(centripetal) = mv*v/r - like a conker on a string.Force attracting it towards the Sun (Sun's Mass = M, G is the Gravitational Constant)F(gravitational) = m*M*G/r*rWhen the object is in a stable orbit, these two forces are equal / balanced, so the object won't move away or towards the Sun, just stay moving in a circle.som*v*v/r = m*M*G/r*rthe m's cancel and so does one of the r's so:v*v = M*G/rre-arrange it to find the radius of orbitr=M*G/v*vm doesn't come into it; all that counts is the speed. This assumes that M is a lot, lot bigger than m, which it is and is the simplest case of a circular orbit - but it applies for elliptical orbits too. so the orbit of the earth is really about velocity? Increase the velocity and the earth drifts outwards to new orbit, decrease the velocity and the earth goes into a lower orbit. (I'm not sure 'velocity' is the correct term, 'speed' may be better)
(I'm not sure 'velocity' is the correct term, 'speed' may be better)
Angular momentum is the word or words your looking for