Title: Physics 1901 (Advanced)
1Physics 1901 (Advanced)
- Prof Geraint F. Lewis
- Rm 560, A29
- gfl_at_physics.usyd.edu.au
- www.physics.usyd.edu.au/gfl/Lecture
2Gyroscope
3Gyroscope Not rotating
4Gyroscope Rotating
5Precision Speed
- Over a small time interval, there is a change in
angular momentum given by
As dL is perpendicular to L, only the direction
of L changes, not magnitude.
6Gravitation
7Using Gravitation
- Newton realised that using his gravitational
formula was actually pretty tricky. If we have a
randomly shaped object, what is the force it
produces on a test (small) mass locate near by?
8Using Gravitation
- Newton realised that a spherical shell of matter
has special properties. If you are outside the
shell, he was able to show that the gravitational
force was the same as if all the mass were
concentrated at the centre of the shell (Rev.
12.6)
Hence any spherical symmetric body (ie built of a
series of shells) behaves as if all the mass were
concentrated at the centre of the shells. Newton
realised he could treat planets as basically
being points! What about inside a spherical shell?
9Weight
- At the surface of the Earth
We know RE, g and G, so can calculate ME
10Falling through the Earth
- Assume a mass is dropped down a tunnel in a
uniform density Earth. What is its equation of
motion? How long does it take to return?
We have a wave equation again!
11Gravitational Potential Energy
- Imagine bringing two mass from far apart to close
together. There is a change in the gravitational
potential given by (remember work done and
potential energy in a uniform gravitational
field).
12Escape Velocity
- Imagine a projective is fired straight up. How
fast must it be traveling not to fall back? - Using conservation of energy
- Earth 11km/s
- Sun 618km/s
- Neutron star 200000km/s
13Motion of Satellites
- Gravity provides a centripetal acceleration. If a
satellite has the correct velocity, v, it will
move in a circular orbit, continually falling
towards the Earth, but not getting any closer.
14Motion of Satellites
- The period of the orbit is
With this, you can calculate the period for a
geostationary orbit. The total energy is
is negative! Orbit is bound.
15Non-circular Orbits
- What if the velocity is too small for circular
motion? - There is to much centripetal force and the
objects radial position changes. By conservation
of energy, it speeds up, then being too fast for
circular motion.
Newton showed that the resultant motion is
elliptical, or if the velocity is much greater
than circular, the orbit is unbound and
hyperbolic. (The derivation is straight forward
and can be found at ??????????????????????????????
????)
16Keplers 1st Law
- Before Newton derived the mathematical form of
orbits, Kepler determined three empirical laws . - His 1st Law says that orbits in the solar system
are elliptical, with the Sun at one focus.
17Is this always true?
- A pair of equal mass stars will orbit their
centre of mass (the barycentre), apparently
orbiting nothing at all! - What motion do you expect the barycentre to have?
Borrowed from Wikipedia
18Keplers 2nd Law
- The 2nd Law says that the area an orbit sweeps
out in a fixed time is a constant.
19Keplers 2nd Law
- Remember that the angular momentum is
For an elliptical orbit, r and ? are continually
changing, but L remains a constant. Given this,
we see that
Keplers 2nd Law is simply an expression of the
conservation of angular momentum.
20Keplers 3rd Law
- Keplers 3rd Law is relates the period of an
elliptical orbit with semi-major axis a
Note that this is not dependent upon the mass of
the orbiting object.
http//hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/kepler.
html
21Orbits
The Solar System
The Galactic Centre
22Orbits In general
- In general, mass distributions are not point-like
or spherical, so the overall potential does not
have a 1/R form. - It turns out that closed elliptical orbits only
occur in 1/R potentials, and generally orbits are
more complicated, often having rosette-like
patterns and are often not closed!
23Round Up
- This is the end of mechanics, and you should now
be familiar with the concepts of force, momentum,
energy and the action of gravity. - Remember, that it is important to understand the
underlying concepts and build on these to
understand the evolution of physical systems. - The laws of mechanics are universal and can be
applied throughout science and the Universe.
24