Motion of Planet and Kepler's Law
Motion of Planet and Kepler's Law
Motion of Planet and Kepler's Law
History:
While Copernicus rightly observed that the planets revolve around the Sun, it was
Kepler who correctly defined their orbits. At the age of 27, Kepler became the assistant of a
wealthy astronomer, Tycho Brahe, who asked him to define the orbit of Mars. Brahe had
collected a lifetime of astronomical observations, which, on his death, passed into Kepler’s
hands. (Brahe, who had his own Earth-centered model of the Universe, withheld the bulk of his
observations from Kepler at least in part because he did not want Kepler to use them to prove
Copernican theory correct.) Using these observations, Kepler found that the orbits of the planets
followed three laws.
Like many philosophers of his era, Kepler had a mystical belief that the circle was
the Universe’s perfect shape, and that as a manifestation of Divine order, the planets’ orbits must
be circular. For many years, he struggled to make Brahe’s observations of the motions of Mars
match up with a circular orbit.
Eventually, however, Kepler noticed that an imaginary line drawn from a planet
to the Sun swept out an equal area of space in equal times, regardless of where the planet was in
its orbit. If you draw a triangle out from the Sun to a planet’s position at one point in time and its
position at a fixed time later say, 5 hours, or 2 days the area of that triangle is always the same,
anywhere in the orbit. For all these triangles to have the same area, the planet must move more
quickly when it is near the Sun, but more slowly when it is farthest from the Sun.
Kepler's first law is rather simple all planets orbit the sun in a path that resembles an
ellipse, with the sun being located at one of the foci of that ellipse.
Average T2/R3
Planet Period (s) Distance (m) (s2/m3)
Mars 5.93 x 107 s 2.278 x 1011 2.975 x 10-19
Earth 3.156 x 107 s 1.4957 x 1011 2.977 x 10-19
Observe that the T2/R3 ratio is the same for Earth as it is for mars. In fact, if the same T2/R3
ratio is computed for the other planets, it can be found that this ratio is nearly the same value for
all the planets (see table below). Amazingly, every planet has the same T2/R3 ratio.
Average T2/R3
Planet Period (yr) Distance (au) (yr2/au3)
Mercury 0.241 0.39 0.98
Venus 0.615 0.72 1.01
Earth 1 1 1
Mars 1.88 1.52 1.01
Jupiter 11.8 5.2 0.99
Saturn 29.5 9.54 1
Uranus 84 19.18 1
Neptune 165 30.06 1
Pluto 248 39.44 1
Kepler's third law provides an accurate description of the period and distance for a planet's orbits
about the sun. Additionally, the same law that describes the T2/R3 ratio for the planets' orbits
about the sun also accurately describes the T2/R3 ratio for any satellite (whether a moon or a
man-made satellite) about any planet. There is something much deeper to be found in this T2/R3
ratio - something that must relate to basic fundamental principles of motion. In the next part of
Lesson 4, these principles will be investigated as we draw a connection between the circular
motion principles discussed in Lesson 1 and the motion of a satellite.
References:
www.physicsclassroom.com/
www.britannica.com/
earthobservatory.nasa.gov/
www.physicsclassroom.com
astro.physics.uiowa.edu/