AP Physics C: Unit 7 Study Guide - Orbital Mechanics

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Last updated 4:52 AM on 3/5/26
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27 Terms

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Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation

Describes the gravitational force between two masses; proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.

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Centripetal Force

A force that acts on an object moving in a circular path, directed toward the center of rotation.

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Orbital Speed

The speed required for an object to maintain a stable orbit around a celestial body, given by the formula v = √(GM/r).

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Orbital Period ($T$)

The time taken to complete one full orbit, calculated using T = 2π√(r³/GM).

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Kepler’s First Law

All planets move in elliptical orbits with the Sun at one focus.

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Eccentricity ($e$)

A measure of how much an orbit deviates from being circular; a circle has e=0.

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Kepler’s Second Law

A line segment joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time.

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Conservation of Angular Momentum

The principle stating that if no external torque acts on a system, the angular momentum of the system remains constant.

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Kepler’s Third Law

States that the square of the orbital period of a planet is proportional to the cube of the semi-major axis of its orbit.

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Gravitational Potential Energy ($U_g$)

The energy possessed by an object due to its position in a gravitational field; U_g = -GMm/r.

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Total Mechanical Energy ($E$)

The sum of kinetic energy and gravitational potential energy in a system; for circular orbits, E = -GMm/(2r).

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Escape Speed

The minimum speed needed for an object to break free from a planet's gravitational pull without further propulsion, given by v_{esc} = √(2GM/r).

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Centripetal force equation

F_g = mv²/r, relating gravitational force to circular motion of an orbiting body.

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Negative sign in potential energy

Indicates that the gravitational potential energy is negative in a bound system, and approaches zero as the distance increases.

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Linear Momentum vs Angular Momentum

Linear momentum is not conserved in orbit due to external forces, while angular momentum is conserved.

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Weightlessness in Orbit

The sensation of weightlessness experienced by astronauts is due to continuous freefall, not the absence of gravity.

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Radius ($r$) in orbital calculations

The distance from the center of the celestial body to the orbiting object; must include the body's radius and altitude.

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Forces in circular motion

Gravity provides the necessary centripetal force that keeps a satellite in a stable orbit.

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Orbital Mechanics

The study of the motion of celestial objects under the influence of gravitational forces.

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Equation for gravitational force

F_g = GMm/r², where G is the gravitational constant.

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Fundamental derivation for orbital velocity

Equates gravitational force to centripetal force to derive velocity.

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Ratio of potential to kinetic energy

For a satellite in a circular orbit, the potential energy is typically -2 times the kinetic energy (U = -2K).

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Torque in orbital motion

In orbital motion, torque is zero because the gravitational force acts along the radius vector.

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Importance of conservation of energy

Energy analysis often provides a clearer understanding of orbital dynamics than force analysis.

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Gravitational constant (G)

A proportionality constant used in the calculation of gravitational force, approximately 6.67 × 10^-11 N·m²/kg².

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Elliptical Orbits

Orbits that are not circular but have varying distances between the orbiting body and the center mass.

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Foci of an ellipse

The two points located in an ellipse; the mass of the celestial body resides at one of these foci.

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