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Escape velocity

In celestial mechanics, escape velocity or escape speed is the minimum speed needed for an object to escape from contact with or orbit of a primary body, assuming:

Although the term escape velocity is common, it is more accurately described as a speed than a velocity because it is independent of direction. Because gravitational force between two objects depends on their combined mass, the escape speed also depends on mass. For artificial satellites and small natural objects, the mass of the object makes a negligible contribution to the combined mass, and so is often simply ignored (including by the formulas in this article).

In this idealized scenario, an object traveling at lower-than-escape speed will follow the curve of an ellipse (or straight line if going directly up), which will result in it orbiting the primary or colliding with its surface. An object headed outward faster than escape speed will continue moving away forever along a hyperbolic trajectory, continuing to slow down under weaker and weaker gravity, but asymptotically approaching a positive speed. An object traveling exactly at escape speed will have a parabolic trajectory. It has precisely balanced positive kinetic energy and negative gravitational potential energy;[a] it will always be slowing down, asymptotically approaching zero speed, but never quite stop.[1] The escape speed thus depends on the distance from the center of the primary body.

In practice, there are many massive bodies in the universe, so escape velocity calculations are typically used to determine whether an object will remain in the gravitational sphere of influence of a given body. For example, in solar system exploration, it is useful to know at what speed a probe will continue to orbit the Earth vs. escape to become a satellite of the Sun. It is also useful to know how much a probe will need to slow down in order to be gravitationally captured by its destination body. Rockets do not have to reach escape velocity in a single maneuver, and objects can also use a gravity assist to siphon kinetic energy away from large bodies. Accurate trajectory calculations require taking into account small forces like atmospheric drag, radiation pressure, and solar wind. A rocket under continuous or intermittent thrust (or an object climbing a space elevator) can attain escape at any non-zero speed, but the minimum amount of energy required to do so is always the same.

Calculation edit

Escape speed at a distance d from the center of a spherically symmetric primary body (such as a star or a planet) with mass M is given by the formula[2][3]

 

where:

The value GM is called the standard gravitational parameter, or μ, and is often known more accurately than either G or M separately.

When given an initial speed   greater than the escape speed   the object will asymptotically approach the hyperbolic excess speed   satisfying the equation:[4]

 

Earth edit

For example, at the Earth's surface, the surface gravity is about 9.8 m/s2 (9.8 N/kg, 32 ft/s2), and the escape speed for a small object is about 11.186 km/s (40,270 km/h; 25,020 mph; 36,700 ft/s).[5] This is approximately 33 times the speed of sound (Mach 33) and several times the muzzle velocity of a rifle bullet (up to 1.7 km/s). At 9,000 km altitude, escape speed is slightly less than 7.1 km/s. These velocities are relative to a non-rotating frame of reference; launching near the equator rather than the poles can actually provide a boost.

Energy required edit

For an object of mass   the energy required to escape the Earth's gravitational field is GMm / r, a function of the object's mass (where r is radius of the Earth, nominally 6,371 kilometres (3,959 mi), G is the gravitational constant, and M is the mass of the Earth, M = 5.9736 × 1024 kg). A related quantity is the specific orbital energy which is essentially the sum of the kinetic and potential energy divided by the mass. An object has reached escape velocity when the specific orbital energy is greater than or equal to zero.

Conservation of energy edit

 
Luna 1, launched in 1959, was the first artificial object to attain escape velocity from Earth.[6] (See List of Solar System probes for more.)

The existence of escape velocity can be thought of as a consequence of conservation of energy and an energy field of finite depth. For an object with a given total energy, which is moving subject to conservative forces (such as a static gravity field) it is only possible for the object to reach combinations of locations and speeds which have that total energy; places which have a higher potential energy than this cannot be reached at all. Adding speed (kinetic energy) to an object expands the region of locations it can reach, until, with enough energy, everywhere to infinity becomes accessible.

The formula for escape velocity can be derived from the principle of conservation of energy. For the sake of simplicity, unless stated otherwise, we assume that an object will escape the gravitational field of a uniform spherical planet by moving away from it and that the only significant force acting on the moving object is the planet's gravity. Imagine that a spaceship of mass m is initially at a distance r from the center of mass of the planet, whose mass is M, and its initial speed is equal to its escape velocity,  . At its final state, it will be an infinite distance away from the planet, and its speed will be negligibly small. Kinetic energy K and gravitational potential energy Ug are the only types of energy that we will deal with (we will ignore the drag of the atmosphere), so by the conservation of energy,

 

We can set Kfinal = 0 because final velocity is arbitrarily small, and Ugfinal = 0 because final gravitational potential energy is defined to be zero a long distance away from a planet, so

 

Relativistic edit

The same result is obtained by a relativistic calculation, in which case the variable r represents the radial coordinate or reduced circumference of the Schwarzschild metric.[7][8]

Scenarios edit

From the surface of a body edit

An alternative expression for the escape velocity   particularly useful at the surface on the body is:

 

where r is the distance between the center of the body and the point at which escape velocity is being calculated and g is the gravitational acceleration at that distance (i.e., the surface gravity).[9]

For a body with a spherically symmetric distribution of mass, the escape velocity   from the surface is proportional to the radius assuming constant density, and proportional to the square root of the average density ρ.

 

where  

This escape velocity is relative to a non-rotating frame of reference, not relative to the moving surface of the planet or moon, as explained below.

From a rotating body edit

The escape velocity relative to the surface of a rotating body depends on direction in which the escaping body travels. For example, as the Earth's rotational velocity is 465 m/s at the equator, a rocket launched tangentially from the Earth's equator to the east requires an initial velocity of about 10.735 km/s relative to the moving surface at the point of launch to escape whereas a rocket launched tangentially from the Earth's equator to the west requires an initial velocity of about 11.665 km/s relative to that moving surface. The surface velocity decreases with the cosine of the geographic latitude, so space launch facilities are often located as close to the equator as feasible, e.g. the American Cape Canaveral (latitude 28°28′ N) and the French Guiana Space Centre (latitude 5°14′ N).

Practical considerations edit

In most situations it is impractical to achieve escape velocity almost instantly, because of the acceleration implied, and also because if there is an atmosphere, the hypersonic speeds involved (on Earth a speed of 11.2 km/s, or 40,320 km/h) would cause most objects to burn up due to aerodynamic heating or be torn apart by atmospheric drag. For an actual escape orbit, a spacecraft will accelerate steadily out of the atmosphere until it reaches the escape velocity appropriate for its altitude (which will be less than on the surface). In many cases, the spacecraft may be first placed in a parking orbit (e.g. a low Earth orbit at 160–2,000 km) and then accelerated to the escape velocity at that altitude, which will be slightly lower (about 11.0 km/s at a low Earth orbit of 200 km). The required additional change in speed, however, is far less because the spacecraft already has a significant orbital speed (in low Earth orbit speed is approximately 7.8 km/s, or 28,080 km/h).

From an orbiting body edit

The escape velocity at a given height is   times the speed in a circular orbit at the same height, (compare this with the velocity equation in circular orbit). This corresponds to the fact that the potential energy with respect to infinity of an object in such an orbit is minus two times its kinetic energy, while to escape the sum of potential and kinetic energy needs to be at least zero. The velocity corresponding to the circular orbit is sometimes called the first cosmic velocity, whereas in this context the escape velocity is referred to as the second cosmic velocity.[10]

For a body in an elliptical orbit wishing to accelerate to an escape orbit the required speed will vary, and will be greatest at periapsis when the body is closest to the central body. However, the orbital speed of the body will also be at its highest at this point, and the change in velocity required will be at its lowest, as explained by the Oberth effect.

Barycentric escape velocity edit

Escape velocity can either be measured as relative to the other, central body or relative to center of mass or barycenter of the system of bodies. Thus for systems of two bodies, the term escape velocity can be ambiguous, but it is usually intended to mean the barycentric escape velocity of the less massive body. Escape velocity usually refers to the escape velocity of zero mass test particles. For zero mass test particles we have that the 'relative to the other' and the 'barycentric' escape velocities are the same, namely  .
But when we can't neglect the smaller mass (say  ) we arrive at slightly different formulas.
Because the system has to obey the law of conservation of momentum we see that both the larger and the smaller mass must be accelerated in the gravitational field. Relative to the center of mass the velocity of the larger mass (  , for planet) can be expressed in terms of the velocity of the smaller mass ( , for rocket). We get  .
The 'barycentric' escape velocity now becomes :   while the 'relative to the other' escape velocity becomes :  .

Height of lower-velocity trajectories edit

Ignoring all factors other than the gravitational force between the body and the object, an object projected vertically at speed   from the surface of a spherical body with escape velocity   and radius   will attain a maximum height   satisfying the equation[11]

 

which, solving for h results in

 

where   is the ratio of the original speed   to the escape velocity  

Unlike escape velocity, the direction (vertically up) is important to achieve maximum height.

Trajectory edit

If an object attains exactly escape velocity, but is not directed straight away from the planet, then it will follow a curved path or trajectory. Although this trajectory does not form a closed shape, it can be referred to as an orbit. Assuming that gravity is the only significant force in the system, this object's speed at any point in the trajectory will be equal to the escape velocity at that point due to the conservation of energy, its total energy must always be 0, which implies that it always has escape velocity; see the derivation above. The shape of the trajectory will be a parabola whose focus is located at the center of mass of the planet. An actual escape requires a course with a trajectory that does not intersect with the planet, or its atmosphere, since this would cause the object to crash. When moving away from the source, this path is called an escape orbit. Escape orbits are known as C3 = 0 orbits. C3 is the characteristic energy, = −GM/2a, where a is the semi-major axis, which is infinite for parabolic trajectories.

If the body has a velocity greater than escape velocity then its path will form a hyperbolic trajectory and it will have an excess hyperbolic velocity, equivalent to the extra energy the body has. A relatively small extra delta-v above that needed to accelerate to the escape speed can result in a relatively large speed at infinity. Some orbital manoeuvres make use of this fact. For example, at a place where escape speed is 11.2 km/s, the addition of 0.4 km/s yields a hyperbolic excess speed of 3.02 km/s:

 

If a body in circular orbit (or at the periapsis of an elliptical orbit) accelerates along its direction of travel to escape velocity, the point of acceleration will form the periapsis of the escape trajectory. The eventual direction of travel will be at 90 degrees to the direction at the point of acceleration. If the body accelerates to beyond escape velocity the eventual direction of travel will be at a smaller angle, and indicated by one of the asymptotes of the hyperbolic trajectory it is now taking. This means the timing of the acceleration is critical if the intention is to escape in a particular direction.

If the speed at periapsis is v, then the eccentricity of the trajectory is given by:

 

This is valid for elliptical, parabolic, and hyperbolic trajectories. If the trajectory is hyperbolic or parabolic, it will asymptotically approach an angle   from the direction at periapsis, with

 

The speed will asymptotically approach

 

List of escape velocities edit

In this table, the left-hand half gives the escape velocity from the visible surface (which may be gaseous as with Jupiter for example), relative to the centre of the planet or moon (that is, not relative to its moving surface). In the right-hand half, Ve refers to the speed relative to the central body (for example the sun), whereas Vte is the speed (at the visible surface of the smaller body) relative to the smaller body (planet or moon).

Location Relative to Ve (km/s)[12] Location Relative to Ve (km/s)[12] System escape, Vte (km/s)
On the Sun The Sun's gravity 617.5
On Mercury Mercury's gravity 4.25 At Mercury The Sun's gravity ~ 67.7 ~ 20.3
On Venus Venus's gravity 10.36 At Venus The Sun's gravity 49.5 17.8
On Earth Earth's gravity 11.186 At Earth The Sun's gravity 42.1 16.6
On the Moon The Moon's gravity 2.38 At the Moon Earth's gravity 1.4 2.42
On Mars Mars' gravity 5.03 At Mars The Sun's gravity 34.1 11.2
On Ceres Ceres's gravity 0.51 At Ceres The Sun's gravity 25.3 7.4
On Jupiter Jupiter's gravity 60.20 At Jupiter The Sun's gravity 18.5 60.4
On Io Io's gravity 2.558 At Io Jupiter's gravity 24.5 7.6
On Europa Europa's gravity 2.025 At Europa Jupiter's gravity 19.4 6.0
On Ganymede Ganymede's gravity 2.741 At Ganymede Jupiter's gravity 15.4 5.3
On Callisto Callisto's gravity 2.440 At Callisto Jupiter's gravity 11.6 4.2
On Saturn Saturn's gravity 36.09 At Saturn The Sun's gravity 13.6 36.3
On Titan Titan's gravity 2.639 At Titan Saturn's gravity 7.8 3.5
On Uranus Uranus' gravity 21.38 At Uranus The Sun's gravity 9.6 21.5
On Neptune Neptune's gravity 23.56 At Neptune The Sun's gravity 7.7 23.7
On Triton Triton's gravity 1.455 At Triton Neptune's gravity 6.2 2.33
On Pluto Pluto's gravity 1.23 At Pluto The Sun's gravity ~ 6.6 ~ 2.3
200 AU from the Sun The Sun's gravity 2.98[13]
1774 AU from the Sun The Sun's gravity 1[13]
At Solar System galactic radius The Milky Way's gravity 492–594[14][15]
On the event horizon A black hole's gravity 299,792.458 (speed of light)

The last two columns will depend precisely where in orbit escape velocity is reached, as the orbits are not exactly circular (particularly Mercury and Pluto).

Deriving escape velocity using calculus edit

Let G be the gravitational constant and let M be the mass of the earth (or other gravitating body) and m be the mass of the escaping body or projectile. At a distance r from the centre of gravitation the body feels an attractive force

 

The work needed to move the body over a small distance dr against this force is therefore given by

 

The total work needed to move the body from the surface r0 of the gravitating body to infinity is then[16]

 

In order to do this work to reach infinity, the body's minimal kinetic energy at departure must match this work, so the escape velocity v0 satisfies

 

which results in

 

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ For explanatory purposes, gravitational potential energy is defined to be zero at an infinite distance.

References edit

  1. ^ Giancoli, Douglas C. (2008). Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics. Addison-Wesley. p. 199. ISBN 978-0-13-149508-1.
  2. ^ Jim Breithaupt (2000). New Understanding Physics for Advanced Level (illustrated ed.). Nelson Thornes. p. 231. ISBN 978-0-7487-4314-8. Extract of page 231
  3. ^ Khatri, Poudel, Gautam, M.K., P.R., A.K. (2010). Principles of Physics. Kathmandu: Ayam Publication. pp. 170, 171. ISBN 9789937903844.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Bate, Roger R.; Mueller, Donald D.; White, Jerry E. (1971). Fundamentals of Astrodynamics (illustrated ed.). Courier Corporation. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-486-60061-1.
  5. ^ Lai, Shu T. (2011). Fundamentals of Spacecraft Charging: Spacecraft Interactions with Space Plasmas. Princeton University Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-4008-3909-4.
  6. ^ "NASA – NSSDC – Spacecraft – Details". from the original on 2 June 2019. Retrieved 21 August 2019.
  7. ^ Taylor, Edwin F.; Wheeler, John Archibald; Bertschinger, Edmund (2010). Exploring Black Holes: Introduction to General Relativity (2nd revised ed.). Addison-Wesley. pp. 2–22. ISBN 978-0-321-51286-4. Sample chapter, page 2-22 21 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Choquet-Bruhat, Yvonne (2015). Introduction to General Relativity, Black Holes, and Cosmology (illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 116–117. ISBN 978-0-19-966646-1.
  9. ^ Bate, Mueller and White, p. 35
  10. ^ Teodorescu, P. P. (2007). Mechanical systems, classical models. Springer, Japan. p. 580. ISBN 978-1-4020-5441-9., Section 2.2.2, p. 580
  11. ^ Bajaj, N. K. (2015). Complete Physics: JEE Main. McGraw-Hill Education. p. 6.12. ISBN 978-93-392-2032-7. Example 21, page 6.12
  12. ^ a b For planets: "Planets and Pluto : Physical Characteristics". NASA. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
  13. ^ a b "To the Voyagers and escaping from the Sun". Initiative for Interstellar Studies. 25 February 2015. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  14. ^ Smith, Martin C.; Ruchti, G. R.; Helmi, A.; Wyse, R. F. G. (2007). "The RAVE Survey: Constraining the Local Galactic Escape Speed". Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union. 2 (S235): 755–772. arXiv:astro-ph/0611671. Bibcode:2007IAUS..235..137S. doi:10.1017/S1743921306005692. S2CID 125255461.
  15. ^ Kafle, P.R.; Sharma, S.; Lewis, G.F.; Bland-Hawthorn, J. (2014). "On the Shoulders of Giants: Properties of the Stellar Halo and the Milky Way Mass Distribution". The Astrophysical Journal. 794 (1): 17. arXiv:1408.1787. Bibcode:2014ApJ...794...59K. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/794/1/59. S2CID 119040135.
  16. ^ Muncaster, Roger (1993). A-level Physics (illustrated ed.). Nelson Thornes. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-7487-1584-8. Extract of page 103

External links edit

  • Escape velocity calculator
  • Web-based numerical escape velocity calculator

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For other uses see Escape Velocity Not to be confused with Orbital speed In celestial mechanics escape velocity or escape speed is the minimum speed needed for an object to escape from contact with or orbit of a primary body assuming Ballistic trajectory no other forces are acting on the object including propulsion and friction No other gravity producing objects existAlthough the term escape velocity is common it is more accurately described as a speed than a velocity because it is independent of direction Because gravitational force between two objects depends on their combined mass the escape speed also depends on mass For artificial satellites and small natural objects the mass of the object makes a negligible contribution to the combined mass and so is often simply ignored including by the formulas in this article In this idealized scenario an object traveling at lower than escape speed will follow the curve of an ellipse or straight line if going directly up which will result in it orbiting the primary or colliding with its surface An object headed outward faster than escape speed will continue moving away forever along a hyperbolic trajectory continuing to slow down under weaker and weaker gravity but asymptotically approaching a positive speed An object traveling exactly at escape speed will have a parabolic trajectory It has precisely balanced positive kinetic energy and negative gravitational potential energy a it will always be slowing down asymptotically approaching zero speed but never quite stop 1 The escape speed thus depends on the distance from the center of the primary body In practice there are many massive bodies in the universe so escape velocity calculations are typically used to determine whether an object will remain in the gravitational sphere of influence of a given body For example in solar system exploration it is useful to know at what speed a probe will continue to orbit the Earth vs escape to become a satellite of the Sun It is also useful to know how much a probe will need to slow down in order to be gravitationally captured by its destination body Rockets do not have to reach escape velocity in a single maneuver and objects can also use a gravity assist to siphon kinetic energy away from large bodies Accurate trajectory calculations require taking into account small forces like atmospheric drag radiation pressure and solar wind A rocket under continuous or intermittent thrust or an object climbing a space elevator can attain escape at any non zero speed but the minimum amount of energy required to do so is always the same Contents 1 Calculation 1 1 Earth 1 2 Energy required 1 3 Conservation of energy 1 4 Relativistic 2 Scenarios 2 1 From the surface of a body 2 2 From a rotating body 2 3 Practical considerations 2 4 From an orbiting body 2 5 Barycentric escape velocity 2 6 Height of lower velocity trajectories 3 Trajectory 4 List of escape velocities 5 Deriving escape velocity using calculus 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksCalculation editEscape speed at a distance d from the center of a spherically symmetric primary body such as a star or a planet with mass M is given by the formula 2 3 v e 2 G M d 2 g d displaystyle v e sqrt frac 2GM d sqrt 2gd nbsp where G is the universal gravitational constant G 6 67 10 11 m3 kg 1 s 2 g GM d2 is the local gravitational acceleration or the surface gravity when d r The value GM is called the standard gravitational parameter or m and is often known more accurately than either G or M separately When given an initial speed V displaystyle V nbsp greater than the escape speed v e displaystyle v e nbsp the object will asymptotically approach the hyperbolic excess speed v displaystyle v infty nbsp satisfying the equation 4 v 2 V 2 v e 2 displaystyle v infty 2 V 2 v e 2 nbsp Earth edit For example at the Earth s surface the surface gravity is about 9 8 m s2 9 8 N kg 32 ft s2 and the escape speed for a small object is about 11 186 km s 40 270 km h 25 020 mph 36 700 ft s 5 This is approximately 33 times the speed of sound Mach 33 and several times the muzzle velocity of a rifle bullet up to 1 7 km s At 9 000 km altitude escape speed is slightly less than 7 1 km s These velocities are relative to a non rotating frame of reference launching near the equator rather than the poles can actually provide a boost Energy required edit For an object of mass m displaystyle m nbsp the energy required to escape the Earth s gravitational field is GMm r a function of the object s mass where r is radius of the Earth nominally 6 371 kilometres 3 959 mi G is the gravitational constant and M is the mass of the Earth M 5 9736 1024 kg A related quantity is the specific orbital energy which is essentially the sum of the kinetic and potential energy divided by the mass An object has reached escape velocity when the specific orbital energy is greater than or equal to zero Conservation of energy edit nbsp Luna 1 launched in 1959 was the first artificial object to attain escape velocity from Earth 6 See List of Solar System probes for more The existence of escape velocity can be thought of as a consequence of conservation of energy and an energy field of finite depth For an object with a given total energy which is moving subject to conservative forces such as a static gravity field it is only possible for the object to reach combinations of locations and speeds which have that total energy places which have a higher potential energy than this cannot be reached at all Adding speed kinetic energy to an object expands the region of locations it can reach until with enough energy everywhere to infinity becomes accessible The formula for escape velocity can be derived from the principle of conservation of energy For the sake of simplicity unless stated otherwise we assume that an object will escape the gravitational field of a uniform spherical planet by moving away from it and that the only significant force acting on the moving object is the planet s gravity Imagine that a spaceship of mass m is initially at a distance r from the center of mass of the planet whose mass is M and its initial speed is equal to its escape velocity v e displaystyle v e nbsp At its final state it will be an infinite distance away from the planet and its speed will be negligibly small Kinetic energy K and gravitational potential energy Ug are the only types of energy that we will deal with we will ignore the drag of the atmosphere so by the conservation of energy K U g initial K U g final displaystyle K U g text initial K U g text final nbsp We can set Kfinal 0 because final velocity is arbitrarily small and Ug final 0 because final gravitational potential energy is defined to be zero a long distance away from a planet so 1 2 m v e 2 G M m r 0 0 v e 2 G M r displaystyle begin aligned Rightarrow amp frac 1 2 mv e 2 frac GMm r 0 0 3pt Rightarrow amp v e sqrt frac 2GM r end aligned nbsp Relativistic edit The same result is obtained by a relativistic calculation in which case the variable r represents the radial coordinate or reduced circumference of the Schwarzschild metric 7 8 Scenarios editFrom the surface of a body edit An alternative expression for the escape velocity v e displaystyle v e nbsp particularly useful at the surface on the body is v e 2 g r displaystyle v e sqrt 2gr nbsp where r is the distance between the center of the body and the point at which escape velocity is being calculated and g is the gravitational acceleration at that distance i e the surface gravity 9 For a body with a spherically symmetric distribution of mass the escape velocity v e displaystyle v e nbsp from the surface is proportional to the radius assuming constant density and proportional to the square root of the average density r v e K r r displaystyle v e Kr sqrt rho nbsp where K 8 3 p G 2 364 10 5 m 1 5 kg 0 5 s 1 textstyle K sqrt frac 8 3 pi G approx 2 364 times 10 5 text m 1 5 text kg 0 5 text s 1 nbsp This escape velocity is relative to a non rotating frame of reference not relative to the moving surface of the planet or moon as explained below From a rotating body edit The escape velocity relative to the surface of a rotating body depends on direction in which the escaping body travels For example as the Earth s rotational velocity is 465 m s at the equator a rocket launched tangentially from the Earth s equator to the east requires an initial velocity of about 10 735 km s relative to the moving surface at the point of launch to escape whereas a rocket launched tangentially from the Earth s equator to the west requires an initial velocity of about 11 665 km s relative to that moving surface The surface velocity decreases with the cosine of the geographic latitude so space launch facilities are often located as close to the equator as feasible e g the American Cape Canaveral latitude 28 28 N and the French Guiana Space Centre latitude 5 14 N Practical considerations edit In most situations it is impractical to achieve escape velocity almost instantly because of the acceleration implied and also because if there is an atmosphere the hypersonic speeds involved on Earth a speed of 11 2 km s or 40 320 km h would cause most objects to burn up due to aerodynamic heating or be torn apart by atmospheric drag For an actual escape orbit a spacecraft will accelerate steadily out of the atmosphere until it reaches the escape velocity appropriate for its altitude which will be less than on the surface In many cases the spacecraft may be first placed in a parking orbit e g a low Earth orbit at 160 2 000 km and then accelerated to the escape velocity at that altitude which will be slightly lower about 11 0 km s at a low Earth orbit of 200 km The required additional change in speed however is far less because the spacecraft already has a significant orbital speed in low Earth orbit speed is approximately 7 8 km s or 28 080 km h From an orbiting body edit The escape velocity at a given height is 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 nbsp times the speed in a circular orbit at the same height compare this with the velocity equation in circular orbit This corresponds to the fact that the potential energy with respect to infinity of an object in such an orbit is minus two times its kinetic energy while to escape the sum of potential and kinetic energy needs to be at least zero The velocity corresponding to the circular orbit is sometimes called the first cosmic velocity whereas in this context the escape velocity is referred to as the second cosmic velocity 10 For a body in an elliptical orbit wishing to accelerate to an escape orbit the required speed will vary and will be greatest at periapsis when the body is closest to the central body However the orbital speed of the body will also be at its highest at this point and the change in velocity required will be at its lowest as explained by the Oberth effect Barycentric escape velocity edit Escape velocity can either be measured as relative to the other central body or relative to center of mass or barycenter of the system of bodies Thus for systems of two bodies the term escape velocity can be ambiguous but it is usually intended to mean the barycentric escape velocity of the less massive body Escape velocity usually refers to the escape velocity of zero mass test particles For zero mass test particles we have that the relative to the other and the barycentric escape velocities are the same namely v e 2 G M d displaystyle v e sqrt frac 2GM d nbsp But when we can t neglect the smaller mass say m displaystyle m nbsp we arrive at slightly different formulas Because the system has to obey the law of conservation of momentum we see that both the larger and the smaller mass must be accelerated in the gravitational field Relative to the center of mass the velocity of the larger mass v p displaystyle v p nbsp for planet can be expressed in terms of the velocity of the smaller mass v r displaystyle v r nbsp for rocket We get v p m M v r displaystyle v p frac m M v r nbsp The barycentric escape velocity now becomes v r 2 G M 2 d M m 2 G M d displaystyle v r sqrt frac 2GM 2 d M m approx sqrt frac 2GM d nbsp while the relative to the other escape velocity becomes v r v p 2 G m M d 2 G M d displaystyle v r v p sqrt frac 2G m M d approx sqrt frac 2GM d nbsp Height of lower velocity trajectories edit Ignoring all factors other than the gravitational force between the body and the object an object projected vertically at speed v displaystyle v nbsp from the surface of a spherical body with escape velocity v e displaystyle v e nbsp and radius R displaystyle R nbsp will attain a maximum height h displaystyle h nbsp satisfying the equation 11 v v e h R h displaystyle v v e sqrt frac h R h nbsp which solving for h results in h x 2 1 x 2 R displaystyle h frac x 2 1 x 2 R nbsp where x v v e textstyle x v v e nbsp is the ratio of the original speed v displaystyle v nbsp to the escape velocity v e displaystyle v e nbsp Unlike escape velocity the direction vertically up is important to achieve maximum height Trajectory editIf an object attains exactly escape velocity but is not directed straight away from the planet then it will follow a curved path or trajectory Although this trajectory does not form a closed shape it can be referred to as an orbit Assuming that gravity is the only significant force in the system this object s speed at any point in the trajectory will be equal to the escape velocity at that point due to the conservation of energy its total energy must always be 0 which implies that it always has escape velocity see the derivation above The shape of the trajectory will be a parabola whose focus is located at the center of mass of the planet An actual escape requires a course with a trajectory that does not intersect with the planet or its atmosphere since this would cause the object to crash When moving away from the source this path is called an escape orbit Escape orbits are known as C3 0 orbits C3 is the characteristic energy GM 2a where a is the semi major axis which is infinite for parabolic trajectories If the body has a velocity greater than escape velocity then its path will form a hyperbolic trajectory and it will have an excess hyperbolic velocity equivalent to the extra energy the body has A relatively small extra delta v above that needed to accelerate to the escape speed can result in a relatively large speed at infinity Some orbital manoeuvres make use of this fact For example at a place where escape speed is 11 2 km s the addition of 0 4 km s yields a hyperbolic excess speed of 3 02 km s v V 2 v e 2 11 6 km s 2 11 2 km s 2 3 02 km s displaystyle v infty sqrt V 2 v e 2 sqrt 11 6 text km s 2 11 2 text km s 2 approx 3 02 text km s nbsp If a body in circular orbit or at the periapsis of an elliptical orbit accelerates along its direction of travel to escape velocity the point of acceleration will form the periapsis of the escape trajectory The eventual direction of travel will be at 90 degrees to the direction at the point of acceleration If the body accelerates to beyond escape velocity the eventual direction of travel will be at a smaller angle and indicated by one of the asymptotes of the hyperbolic trajectory it is now taking This means the timing of the acceleration is critical if the intention is to escape in a particular direction If the speed at periapsis is v then the eccentricity of the trajectory is given by e 2 v v e 2 1 displaystyle e 2 v v e 2 1 nbsp This is valid for elliptical parabolic and hyperbolic trajectories If the trajectory is hyperbolic or parabolic it will asymptotically approach an angle 8 displaystyle theta nbsp from the direction at periapsis with sin 8 1 e displaystyle sin theta 1 e nbsp The speed will asymptotically approach v 2 v e 2 displaystyle sqrt v 2 v e 2 nbsp List of escape velocities editIn this table the left hand half gives the escape velocity from the visible surface which may be gaseous as with Jupiter for example relative to the centre of the planet or moon that is not relative to its moving surface In the right hand half Ve refers to the speed relative to the central body for example the sun whereas Vte is the speed at the visible surface of the smaller body relative to the smaller body planet or moon Location Relative to Ve km s 12 Location Relative to Ve km s 12 System escape Vte km s On the Sun The Sun s gravity 617 5On Mercury Mercury s gravity 4 25 At Mercury The Sun s gravity 67 7 20 3On Venus Venus s gravity 10 36 At Venus The Sun s gravity 49 5 17 8On Earth Earth s gravity 11 186 At Earth The Sun s gravity 42 1 16 6On the Moon The Moon s gravity 2 38 At the Moon Earth s gravity 1 4 2 42On Mars Mars gravity 5 03 At Mars The Sun s gravity 34 1 11 2On Ceres Ceres s gravity 0 51 At Ceres The Sun s gravity 25 3 7 4On Jupiter Jupiter s gravity 60 20 At Jupiter The Sun s gravity 18 5 60 4On Io Io s gravity 2 558 At Io Jupiter s gravity 24 5 7 6On Europa Europa s gravity 2 025 At Europa Jupiter s gravity 19 4 6 0On Ganymede Ganymede s gravity 2 741 At Ganymede Jupiter s gravity 15 4 5 3On Callisto Callisto s gravity 2 440 At Callisto Jupiter s gravity 11 6 4 2On Saturn Saturn s gravity 36 09 At Saturn The Sun s gravity 13 6 36 3On Titan Titan s gravity 2 639 At Titan Saturn s gravity 7 8 3 5On Uranus Uranus gravity 21 38 At Uranus The Sun s gravity 9 6 21 5On Neptune Neptune s gravity 23 56 At Neptune The Sun s gravity 7 7 23 7On Triton Triton s gravity 1 455 At Triton Neptune s gravity 6 2 2 33On Pluto Pluto s gravity 1 23 At Pluto The Sun s gravity 6 6 2 3200 AU from the Sun The Sun s gravity 2 98 13 1774 AU from the Sun The Sun s gravity 1 13 At Solar System galactic radius The Milky Way s gravity 492 594 14 15 On the event horizon A black hole s gravity 299 792 458 speed of light The last two columns will depend precisely where in orbit escape velocity is reached as the orbits are not exactly circular particularly Mercury and Pluto Deriving escape velocity using calculus editLet G be the gravitational constant and let M be the mass of the earth or other gravitating body and m be the mass of the escaping body or projectile At a distance r from the centre of gravitation the body feels an attractive force F G M m r 2 displaystyle F G frac Mm r 2 nbsp The work needed to move the body over a small distance dr against this force is therefore given by d W F d r G M m r 2 d r displaystyle dW F dr G frac Mm r 2 dr nbsp The total work needed to move the body from the surface r0 of the gravitating body to infinity is then 16 W r 0 G M m r 2 d r G M m r 0 m g r 0 displaystyle W int r 0 infty G frac Mm r 2 dr G frac Mm r 0 mgr 0 nbsp In order to do this work to reach infinity the body s minimal kinetic energy at departure must match this work so the escape velocity v0 satisfies 1 2 m v 0 2 G M m r 0 displaystyle frac 1 2 mv 0 2 G frac Mm r 0 nbsp which results in v 0 2 G M r 0 2 g r 0 displaystyle v 0 sqrt frac 2GM r 0 sqrt 2gr 0 nbsp See also editBlack hole an object with an escape velocity greater than the speed of light Characteristic energy C3 Delta v budget speed needed to perform maneuvers Gravitational slingshot a technique for changing trajectory Gravity well List of artificial objects in heliocentric orbit List of artificial objects leaving the Solar System Newton s cannonball Oberth effect burning propellant deep in a gravity field gives higher change in kinetic energy Two body problemNotes edit For explanatory purposes gravitational potential energy is defined to be zero at an infinite distance References edit Giancoli Douglas C 2008 Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics Addison Wesley p 199 ISBN 978 0 13 149508 1 Jim Breithaupt 2000 New Understanding Physics for Advanced Level illustrated ed Nelson Thornes p 231 ISBN 978 0 7487 4314 8 Extract of page 231 Khatri Poudel Gautam M K P R A K 2010 Principles of Physics Kathmandu Ayam Publication pp 170 171 ISBN 9789937903844 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bate Roger R Mueller Donald D White Jerry E 1971 Fundamentals of Astrodynamics illustrated ed Courier Corporation p 39 ISBN 978 0 486 60061 1 Lai Shu T 2011 Fundamentals of Spacecraft Charging Spacecraft Interactions with Space Plasmas Princeton University Press p 240 ISBN 978 1 4008 3909 4 NASA NSSDC Spacecraft Details Archived from the original on 2 June 2019 Retrieved 21 August 2019 Taylor Edwin F Wheeler John Archibald Bertschinger Edmund 2010 Exploring Black Holes Introduction to General Relativity 2nd revised ed Addison Wesley pp 2 22 ISBN 978 0 321 51286 4 Sample chapter page 2 22 Archived 21 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Choquet Bruhat Yvonne 2015 Introduction to General Relativity Black Holes and Cosmology illustrated ed Oxford University Press pp 116 117 ISBN 978 0 19 966646 1 Bate Mueller and White p 35 Teodorescu P P 2007 Mechanical systems classical models Springer Japan p 580 ISBN 978 1 4020 5441 9 Section 2 2 2 p 580 Bajaj N K 2015 Complete Physics JEE Main McGraw Hill Education p 6 12 ISBN 978 93 392 2032 7 Example 21 page 6 12 a b For planets Planets and Pluto Physical Characteristics NASA Retrieved 18 January 2017 a b To the Voyagers and escaping from the Sun Initiative for Interstellar Studies 25 February 2015 Retrieved 3 February 2023 Smith Martin C Ruchti G R Helmi A Wyse R F G 2007 The RAVE Survey Constraining the Local Galactic Escape Speed Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 2 S235 755 772 arXiv astro ph 0611671 Bibcode 2007IAUS 235 137S doi 10 1017 S1743921306005692 S2CID 125255461 Kafle P R Sharma S Lewis G F Bland Hawthorn J 2014 On the Shoulders of Giants Properties of the Stellar Halo and the Milky Way Mass Distribution The Astrophysical Journal 794 1 17 arXiv 1408 1787 Bibcode 2014ApJ 794 59K doi 10 1088 0004 637X 794 1 59 S2CID 119040135 Muncaster Roger 1993 A level Physics illustrated ed Nelson Thornes p 103 ISBN 978 0 7487 1584 8 Extract of page 103External links editEscape velocity calculator Web based numerical escape velocity calculator Portals nbsp Physics nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System nbsp Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Escape velocity amp oldid 1204019096 List of escape velocities, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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