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Newton's Legacy: Gravitation and Circular Motion

This handout explores Newton's laws of gravitation and circular motion, explaining the universal nature of gravity and its application to the motion of planets and objects in circular paths. It covers concepts such as gravitational force, inverse square law, circular motion, velocity, acceleration, angular momentum, torque, central force, satellites, gravitational potential energy, and the relationship between gravitational and inertial mass.

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Newton's Legacy: Gravitation and Circular Motion

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  1. Handout III : Gravitation and Circular Motion EE1 Particle Kinematics : Newton’s Legacy“I frame no hypotheses; for whatever is not deduced from the phenomena is to be called a hypothesis; and hypotheses, whether metaphysical or physical, whether of occult qualities or mechanical, have no place in experimental philosophy.” Chris Parkes http://ppewww.ph.gla.ac.uk/~parkes/teaching/PK/PK.html October 2004

  2. Myth of Newton & apple. He realised gravity is universal same for planets and apples m2 m1 Gravitational Force • Any two masses m1,m2 attract each other with a gravitational force: F F r Newton’s law of Gravity Inverse square law 1/r2, r distance between masses The gravitational constant G = 6.67 x 10-11 Nm2/kg2 • Explains motion of planets, moons and tides mE=5.97x1024kg, RE=6378km Mass, radius of earth Gravity on earth’s surface Or Hence,

  3. 360o = 2 radians 180o =  radians 90o = /2 radians =t Circular Motion • Rotate in circle with constant angular speed  • R – radius of circle • s – distance moved along circumference • =t, angle  (radians) = s/R • Co-ordinates • x= R cos  = R cos t • y= R sin  = R sin t • Velocity R s y t=0 x • Acceleration

  4. Magnitude and direction of motion • Velocity v=R And direction of velocity vector v Is tangential to the circle v  • Acceleration a  • a= 2R=(R)2/R=v2/R And direction of acceleration vector a • a= -2r Acceleration is towards centre of circle

  5. Angular Momentum (using v=R) • For a body moving in a circle of radius r at speed v, the angular momentum is L=(mv)r = mr2= I  The rate of change of angular momentum is • The product rF is called the torque of the Force • Work done by force is Fs =(Fr)(s/r) = Torque  angle in radians Power = rate of doing work = Torque  Angular velocity I is called moment of inertia s  r

  6. Force towards centre of circle • Particle is accelerating • So must be a Force • Accelerating towards centre of circle • So force is towards centre of circle F=ma= mv2/R in direction –r or using unit vector • Examples of central Force • Tension in a rope • Banked Corner • Gravity acting on a satellite

  7. N.B. general solution is an ellipse not a circle - planets travel in ellipses around sun Satellites • Centripetal Force provided by Gravity m R M Distance in one revolution s = 2R, in time period T, v=s/T T2R3 , Kepler’s 3rd Law • Special case of satellites – Geostationary orbit • Stay above same point on earth T=24 hours

  8. m2 m1 Gravitational Potential Energy • How much work must we do to move m1 from rto infinity ? • When distance R • Work done in moving dR dW=FdR • Total work done r Choose Potential energy (PE) to be zero when at infinity Then stored energy when at r is –W -ve as attractive force, so PE must be maximal at 

  9. Compare Gravitational P.E. • Relate to other expression that you know • Potential Energy falling distance h to earth’s surface = mgh • Uses: • Expression for g from earlier • g=GME/RE2 • Binomial expansion given h<<RE • (1+)-1 = 1- +…..smaller terms… • Compare with Electrostatics: Same form, but watch signs: attractive or repulsive force attract repel Maximal at  Minimal at

  10. A final complication: what do we mean by mass ? • Newton’s 2nd law F = mIa • Law of Gravity mI isinertial mass mG,MG isgravitational mass - like electric charge for gravity Are these the same ? • Yes, but that took another 250 years till • Einstein’s theory of relativity to explain!

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