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Elliptic orbit

In astrodynamics or celestial mechanics, an elliptic orbit or elliptical orbit is a Kepler orbit with an eccentricity of less than 1; this includes the special case of a circular orbit, with eccentricity equal to 0. In a stricter sense, it is a Kepler orbit with the eccentricity greater than 0 and less than 1 (thus excluding the circular orbit). In a wider sense, it is a Kepler orbit with negative energy. This includes the radial elliptic orbit, with eccentricity equal to 1.

Animation of Orbit by eccentricity
  0.0 ·   0.2 ·   0.4 ·   0.6 ·   0.8
Two bodies with similar mass orbiting around a common barycenter with elliptic orbits.
Two bodies with unequal mass orbiting around a common barycenter with circular orbits.
Two bodies with highly unequal mass orbiting a common barycenter with circular orbits.
An elliptical orbit is depicted in the top-right quadrant of this diagram, where the gravitational potential well of the central mass shows potential energy, and the kinetic energy of the orbital speed is shown in red. The height of the kinetic energy decreases as the orbiting body's speed decreases and distance increases according to Kepler's laws.

In a gravitational two-body problem with negative energy, both bodies follow similar elliptic orbits with the same orbital period around their common barycenter. Also the relative position of one body with respect to the other follows an elliptic orbit.

Examples of elliptic orbits include Hohmann transfer orbits, Molniya orbits, and tundra orbits.

Velocity edit

Under standard assumptions, no other forces acting except two spherically symmetrical bodies m1 and m2,[1] the orbital speed ( ) of one body traveling along an elliptic orbit can be computed from the vis-viva equation as:[2]

 

where:

  •   is the standard gravitational parameter, G(m1+m2), often expressed as GM when one body is much larger than the other.
  •   is the distance between the orbiting body and center of mass.
  •   is the length of the semi-major axis.

The velocity equation for a hyperbolic trajectory has either +  , or it is the same with the convention that in that case a is negative.

Orbital period edit

Under standard assumptions the orbital period( ) of a body travelling along an elliptic orbit can be computed as:[3]

 

where:

Conclusions:

  • The orbital period is equal to that for a circular orbit with the orbital radius equal to the semi-major axis ( ),
  • For a given semi-major axis the orbital period does not depend on the eccentricity (See also: Kepler's third law).

Energy edit

Under standard assumptions, the specific orbital energy ( ) of an elliptic orbit is negative and the orbital energy conservation equation (the Vis-viva equation) for this orbit can take the form:[4]

 

where:

Conclusions:

  • For a given semi-major axis the specific orbital energy is independent of the eccentricity.

Using the virial theorem we find:

  • the time-average of the specific potential energy is equal to −2ε
    • the time-average of r−1 is a−1
  • the time-average of the specific kinetic energy is equal to ε

Energy in terms of semi major axis edit

It can be helpful to know the energy in terms of the semi major axis (and the involved masses). The total energy of the orbit is given by

 ,

where a is the semi major axis.

Derivation edit

Since gravity is a central force, the angular momentum is constant:

 

At the closest and furthest approaches, the angular momentum is perpendicular to the distance from the mass orbited, therefore:

 .

The total energy of the orbit is given by[5]

 .

We may substitute for v and obtain

 .

This is true for r being the closest / furthest distance so we get two simultaneous equations which we solve for E:

 

Since   and  , where epsilon is the eccentricity of the orbit, we finally have the stated result.

Flight path angle edit

The flight path angle is the angle between the orbiting body's velocity vector (= the vector tangent to the instantaneous orbit) and the local horizontal. Under standard assumptions of the conservation of angular momentum the flight path angle   satisfies the equation:[6]

 

where:

  •   is the specific relative angular momentum of the orbit,
  •   is the orbital speed of the orbiting body,
  •   is the radial distance of the orbiting body from the central body,
  •   is the flight path angle

  is the angle between the orbital velocity vector and the semi-major axis.   is the local true anomaly.  , therefore,

 
 

where   is the eccentricity.

The angular momentum is related to the vector cross product of position and velocity, which is proportional to the sine of the angle between these two vectors. Here   is defined as the angle which differs by 90 degrees from this, so the cosine appears in place of the sine.

Equation of motion edit

From initial position and velocity edit

An orbit equation defines the path of an orbiting body   around central body   relative to  , without specifying position as a function of time. If the eccentricity is less than 1 then the equation of motion describes an elliptical orbit. Because Kepler's equation   has no general closed-form solution for the Eccentric anomaly (E) in terms of the Mean anomaly (M), equations of motion as a function of time also have no closed-form solution (although numerical solutions exist for both).

However, closed-form time-independent path equations of an elliptic orbit with respect to a central body can be determined from just an initial position ( ) and velocity ( ).


For this case it is convenient to use the following assumptions which differ somewhat from the standard assumptions above:

  1. The central body's position is at the origin and is the primary focus ( ) of the ellipse (alternatively, the center of mass may be used instead if the orbiting body has a significant mass)
  2. The central body's mass (m1) is known
  3. The orbiting body's initial position( ) and velocity( ) are known
  4. The ellipse lies within the XY-plane

The fourth assumption can be made without loss of generality because any three points (or vectors) must lie within a common plane. Under these assumptions the second focus (sometimes called the "empty" focus) must also lie within the XY-plane:   .

Using vectors edit

The general equation of an ellipse under these assumptions using vectors is:

 

where:

  •   is the length of the semi-major axis.
  •   is the second ("empty") focus.
  •   is any (x,y) value satisfying the equation.


The semi-major axis length (a) can be calculated as:

 

where   is the standard gravitational parameter.


The empty focus ( ) can be found by first determining the Eccentricity vector:

 

Where   is the specific angular momentum of the orbiting body:[7]

 

Then

 

Using XY Coordinates edit

This can be done in cartesian coordinates using the following procedure:

The general equation of an ellipse under the assumptions above is:

 

Given:

  the initial position coordinates
  the initial velocity coordinates

and

  the gravitational parameter

Then:

  specific angular momentum
  initial distance from F1 (at the origin)
  the semi-major axis length


  the Eccentricity vector coordinates
 


Finally, the empty focus coordinates

 
 


Now the result values fx, fy and a can be applied to the general ellipse equation above.

Orbital parameters edit

The state of an orbiting body at any given time is defined by the orbiting body's position and velocity with respect to the central body, which can be represented by the three-dimensional Cartesian coordinates (position of the orbiting body represented by x, y, and z) and the similar Cartesian components of the orbiting body's velocity. This set of six variables, together with time, are called the orbital state vectors. Given the masses of the two bodies they determine the full orbit. The two most general cases with these 6 degrees of freedom are the elliptic and the hyperbolic orbit. Special cases with fewer degrees of freedom are the circular and parabolic orbit.

Because at least six variables are absolutely required to completely represent an elliptic orbit with this set of parameters, then six variables are required to represent an orbit with any set of parameters. Another set of six parameters that are commonly used are the orbital elements.

Solar System edit

In the Solar System, planets, asteroids, most comets, and some pieces of space debris have approximately elliptical orbits around the Sun. Strictly speaking, both bodies revolve around the same focus of the ellipse, the one closer to the more massive body, but when one body is significantly more massive, such as the sun in relation to the earth, the focus may be contained within the larger massing body, and thus the smaller is said to revolve around it. The following chart of the perihelion and aphelion of the planets, dwarf planets, and Halley's Comet demonstrates the variation of the eccentricity of their elliptical orbits. For similar distances from the sun, wider bars denote greater eccentricity. Note the almost-zero eccentricity of Earth and Venus compared to the enormous eccentricity of Halley's Comet and Eris.

Astronomical unitAstronomical unitAstronomical unitAstronomical unitAstronomical unitAstronomical unitAstronomical unitAstronomical unitAstronomical unitAstronomical unitHalley's CometSunEris (dwarf planet)Makemake (dwarf planet)Haumea (dwarf planet)PlutoCeres (dwarf planet)NeptuneUranusSaturnJupiterMarsEarthVenusMercury (planet)Astronomical unitAstronomical unitDwarf planetDwarf planetCometPlanet

Distances of selected bodies of the Solar System from the Sun. The left and right edges of each bar correspond to the perihelion and aphelion of the body, respectively, hence long bars denote high orbital eccentricity. The radius of the Sun is 0.7 million km, and the radius of Jupiter (the largest planet) is 0.07 million km, both too small to resolve on this image.

Radial elliptic trajectory edit

A radial trajectory can be a double line segment, which is a degenerate ellipse with semi-minor axis = 0 and eccentricity = 1. Although the eccentricity is 1, this is not a parabolic orbit. Most properties and formulas of elliptic orbits apply. However, the orbit cannot be closed. It is an open orbit corresponding to the part of the degenerate ellipse from the moment the bodies touch each other and move away from each other until they touch each other again. In the case of point masses one full orbit is possible, starting and ending with a singularity. The velocities at the start and end are infinite in opposite directions and the potential energy is equal to minus infinity.

The radial elliptic trajectory is the solution of a two-body problem with at some instant zero speed, as in the case of dropping an object (neglecting air resistance).

History edit

The Babylonians were the first to realize that the Sun's motion along the ecliptic was not uniform, though they were unaware of why this was; it is today known that this is due to the Earth moving in an elliptic orbit around the Sun, with the Earth moving faster when it is nearer to the Sun at perihelion and moving slower when it is farther away at aphelion.[8]

In the 17th century, Johannes Kepler discovered that the orbits along which the planets travel around the Sun are ellipses with the Sun at one focus, and described this in his first law of planetary motion. Later, Isaac Newton explained this as a corollary of his law of universal gravitation.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Bate, Mueller, White (1971). Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics (First ed.). New York: Dover. pp. 11–12. ISBN 0-486-60061-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Lissauer, Jack J.; de Pater, Imke (2019). Fundamental Planetary Sciences: physics, chemistry, and habitability. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. pp. 29–31. ISBN 9781108411981.
  3. ^ Bate, Mueller, White (1971). Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics (First ed.). New York: Dover. p. 33. ISBN 0-486-60061-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Bate, Mueller, White (1971). Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics (First ed.). New York: Dover. pp. 27–28. ISBN 0-486-60061-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Bate, Mueller, White (1971). Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics (First ed.). New York: Dover. p. 15. ISBN 0-486-60061-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Bate, Mueller, White (1971). Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics (First ed.). New York: Dover. p. 18. ISBN 0-486-60061-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ Bate, Mueller, White (1971). Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics (First ed.). New York: Dover. p. 17. ISBN 0-486-60061-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ David Leverington (2003), Babylon to Voyager and beyond: a history of planetary astronomy, Cambridge University Press, pp. 6–7, ISBN 0-521-80840-5

Sources edit

  • D'Eliseo, Maurizio M. (2007). "The First-Order Orbital Equation". American Journal of Physics. 75 (4): 352–355. Bibcode:2007AmJPh..75..352D. doi:10.1119/1.2432126.
  • D'Eliseo, Maurizio M.; Mironov, Sergey V. (2009). "The Gravitational Ellipse". Journal of Mathematical Physics. 50 (2): 022901. arXiv:0802.2435. Bibcode:2009JMP....50a2901M. doi:10.1063/1.3078419.
  • Curtis, Howard D. (2019). Orbital Mechanics for Engineering Students (4th ed.). Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-08-102133-0.

External links edit

  • in an elliptic Kepler orbit around the Earth with any value for semi-major axis and eccentricity.
  • Apogee - Perigee Lunar photographic comparison
  • Aphelion - Perihelion Solar photographic comparison
  • http://www.castor2.ca

elliptic, orbit, this, article, includes, list, references, related, reading, external, links, sources, remain, unclear, because, lacks, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, january, 2021, learn, when,. This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In astrodynamics or celestial mechanics an elliptic orbit or elliptical orbit is a Kepler orbit with an eccentricity of less than 1 this includes the special case of a circular orbit with eccentricity equal to 0 In a stricter sense it is a Kepler orbit with the eccentricity greater than 0 and less than 1 thus excluding the circular orbit In a wider sense it is a Kepler orbit with negative energy This includes the radial elliptic orbit with eccentricity equal to 1 Animation of Orbit by eccentricity 0 0 0 2 0 4 0 6 0 8Two bodies with similar mass orbiting around a common barycenter with elliptic orbits Two bodies with unequal mass orbiting around a common barycenter with circular orbits Two bodies with highly unequal mass orbiting a common barycenter with circular orbits An elliptical orbit is depicted in the top right quadrant of this diagram where the gravitational potential well of the central mass shows potential energy and the kinetic energy of the orbital speed is shown in red The height of the kinetic energy decreases as the orbiting body s speed decreases and distance increases according to Kepler s laws In a gravitational two body problem with negative energy both bodies follow similar elliptic orbits with the same orbital period around their common barycenter Also the relative position of one body with respect to the other follows an elliptic orbit Examples of elliptic orbits include Hohmann transfer orbits Molniya orbits and tundra orbits Contents 1 Velocity 2 Orbital period 3 Energy 3 1 Energy in terms of semi major axis 3 1 1 Derivation 4 Flight path angle 5 Equation of motion 5 1 From initial position and velocity 5 1 1 Using vectors 5 1 2 Using XY Coordinates 6 Orbital parameters 7 Solar System 8 Radial elliptic trajectory 9 History 10 See also 11 References 12 Sources 13 External linksVelocity editUnder standard assumptions no other forces acting except two spherically symmetrical bodies m1 and m2 1 the orbital speed v displaystyle v nbsp of one body traveling along an elliptic orbit can be computed from the vis viva equation as 2 v m 2 r 1 a displaystyle v sqrt mu left 2 over r 1 over a right nbsp where m displaystyle mu nbsp is the standard gravitational parameter G m1 m2 often expressed as GM when one body is much larger than the other r displaystyle r nbsp is the distance between the orbiting body and center of mass a displaystyle a nbsp is the length of the semi major axis The velocity equation for a hyperbolic trajectory has either 1 a displaystyle 1 over a nbsp or it is the same with the convention that in that case a is negative Orbital period editUnder standard assumptions the orbital period T displaystyle T nbsp of a body travelling along an elliptic orbit can be computed as 3 T 2 p a 3 m displaystyle T 2 pi sqrt a 3 over mu nbsp where m displaystyle mu nbsp is the standard gravitational parameter a displaystyle a nbsp is the length of the semi major axis Conclusions The orbital period is equal to that for a circular orbit with the orbital radius equal to the semi major axis a displaystyle a nbsp For a given semi major axis the orbital period does not depend on the eccentricity See also Kepler s third law Energy editUnder standard assumptions the specific orbital energy ϵ displaystyle epsilon nbsp of an elliptic orbit is negative and the orbital energy conservation equation the Vis viva equation for this orbit can take the form 4 v 2 2 m r m 2 a ϵ lt 0 displaystyle v 2 over 2 mu over r mu over 2a epsilon lt 0 nbsp where v displaystyle v nbsp is the orbital speed of the orbiting body r displaystyle r nbsp is the distance of the orbiting body from the central body a displaystyle a nbsp is the length of the semi major axis m displaystyle mu nbsp is the standard gravitational parameter Conclusions For a given semi major axis the specific orbital energy is independent of the eccentricity Using the virial theorem we find the time average of the specific potential energy is equal to 2e the time average of r 1 is a 1 the time average of the specific kinetic energy is equal to eEnergy in terms of semi major axis edit It can be helpful to know the energy in terms of the semi major axis and the involved masses The total energy of the orbit is given by E G M m 2 a displaystyle E G frac Mm 2a nbsp where a is the semi major axis Derivation edit Since gravity is a central force the angular momentum is constant L r F r F r r 0 displaystyle dot mathbf L mathbf r times mathbf F mathbf r times F r mathbf hat r 0 nbsp At the closest and furthest approaches the angular momentum is perpendicular to the distance from the mass orbited therefore L r p r m v displaystyle L rp rmv nbsp The total energy of the orbit is given by 5 E 1 2 m v 2 G M m r displaystyle E frac 1 2 mv 2 G frac Mm r nbsp We may substitute for v and obtain E 1 2 L 2 m r 2 G M m r displaystyle E frac 1 2 frac L 2 mr 2 G frac Mm r nbsp This is true for r being the closest furthest distance so we get two simultaneous equations which we solve for E E G M m r 1 r 2 displaystyle E G frac Mm r 1 r 2 nbsp Since r 1 a a ϵ textstyle r 1 a a epsilon nbsp and r 2 a a ϵ displaystyle r 2 a a epsilon nbsp where epsilon is the eccentricity of the orbit we finally have the stated result Flight path angle editThe flight path angle is the angle between the orbiting body s velocity vector the vector tangent to the instantaneous orbit and the local horizontal Under standard assumptions of the conservation of angular momentum the flight path angle ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp satisfies the equation 6 h r v cos ϕ displaystyle h r v cos phi nbsp where h displaystyle h nbsp is the specific relative angular momentum of the orbit v displaystyle v nbsp is the orbital speed of the orbiting body r displaystyle r nbsp is the radial distance of the orbiting body from the central body ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp is the flight path angleps displaystyle psi nbsp is the angle between the orbital velocity vector and the semi major axis n displaystyle nu nbsp is the local true anomaly ϕ n p 2 ps displaystyle phi nu frac pi 2 psi nbsp therefore cos ϕ sin ps n sin ps cos n cos ps sin n 1 e cos n 1 e 2 2 e cos n displaystyle cos phi sin psi nu sin psi cos nu cos psi sin nu frac 1 e cos nu sqrt 1 e 2 2e cos nu nbsp tan ϕ e sin n 1 e cos n displaystyle tan phi frac e sin nu 1 e cos nu nbsp where e displaystyle e nbsp is the eccentricity The angular momentum is related to the vector cross product of position and velocity which is proportional to the sine of the angle between these two vectors Here ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp is defined as the angle which differs by 90 degrees from this so the cosine appears in place of the sine This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Equation of motion editMain article orbit equation From initial position and velocity edit An orbit equation defines the path of an orbiting body m 2 displaystyle m 2 nbsp around central body m 1 displaystyle m 1 nbsp relative to m 1 displaystyle m 1 nbsp without specifying position as a function of time If the eccentricity is less than 1 then the equation of motion describes an elliptical orbit Because Kepler s equation M E e sin E displaystyle M E e sin E nbsp has no general closed form solution for the Eccentric anomaly E in terms of the Mean anomaly M equations of motion as a function of time also have no closed form solution although numerical solutions exist for both However closed form time independent path equations of an elliptic orbit with respect to a central body can be determined from just an initial position r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp and velocity v displaystyle mathbf v nbsp For this case it is convenient to use the following assumptions which differ somewhat from the standard assumptions above The central body s position is at the origin and is the primary focus F 1 displaystyle mathbf F1 nbsp of the ellipse alternatively the center of mass may be used instead if the orbiting body has a significant mass The central body s mass m1 is known The orbiting body s initial position r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp and velocity v displaystyle mathbf v nbsp are known The ellipse lies within the XY planeThe fourth assumption can be made without loss of generality because any three points or vectors must lie within a common plane Under these assumptions the second focus sometimes called the empty focus must also lie within the XY plane F 2 f x f y displaystyle mathbf F2 left f x f y right nbsp Using vectors edit The general equation of an ellipse under these assumptions using vectors is F 2 p p 2 a z 0 displaystyle mathbf F2 mathbf p mathbf p 2a qquad mid z 0 nbsp where a displaystyle a nbsp is the length of the semi major axis F 2 f x f y displaystyle mathbf F2 left f x f y right nbsp is the second empty focus p x y displaystyle mathbf p left x y right nbsp is any x y value satisfying the equation The semi major axis length a can be calculated as a m r 2 m r v 2 displaystyle a frac mu mathbf r 2 mu mathbf r mathbf v 2 nbsp where m G m 1 displaystyle mu Gm 1 nbsp is the standard gravitational parameter The empty focus F 2 f x f y displaystyle mathbf F2 left f x f y right nbsp can be found by first determining the Eccentricity vector e r r v h m displaystyle mathbf e frac mathbf r mathbf r frac mathbf v times mathbf h mu nbsp Where h displaystyle mathbf h nbsp is the specific angular momentum of the orbiting body 7 h r v displaystyle mathbf h mathbf r times mathbf v nbsp Then F 2 2 a e displaystyle mathbf F2 2a mathbf e nbsp Using XY Coordinates edit This can be done in cartesian coordinates using the following procedure The general equation of an ellipse under the assumptions above is f x x 2 f y y 2 x 2 y 2 2 a z 0 displaystyle sqrt left f x x right 2 left f y y right 2 sqrt x 2 y 2 2a qquad mid z 0 nbsp Given r x r y displaystyle r x r y quad nbsp the initial position coordinates v x v y displaystyle v x v y quad nbsp the initial velocity coordinatesand m G m 1 displaystyle mu Gm 1 quad nbsp the gravitational parameterThen h r x v y r y v x displaystyle h r x v y r y v x quad nbsp specific angular momentumr r x 2 r y 2 displaystyle r sqrt r x 2 r y 2 quad nbsp initial distance from F1 at the origin a m r 2 m r v x 2 v y 2 displaystyle a frac mu r 2 mu r left v x 2 v y 2 right quad nbsp the semi major axis length e x r x r h v y m displaystyle e x frac r x r frac hv y mu quad nbsp the Eccentricity vector coordinates e y r y r h v x m displaystyle e y frac r y r frac hv x mu quad nbsp Finally the empty focus coordinates f x 2 a e x displaystyle f x 2ae x quad nbsp f y 2 a e y displaystyle f y 2ae y quad nbsp Now the result values fx fy and a can be applied to the general ellipse equation above Orbital parameters editThe state of an orbiting body at any given time is defined by the orbiting body s position and velocity with respect to the central body which can be represented by the three dimensional Cartesian coordinates position of the orbiting body represented by x y and z and the similar Cartesian components of the orbiting body s velocity This set of six variables together with time are called the orbital state vectors Given the masses of the two bodies they determine the full orbit The two most general cases with these 6 degrees of freedom are the elliptic and the hyperbolic orbit Special cases with fewer degrees of freedom are the circular and parabolic orbit Because at least six variables are absolutely required to completely represent an elliptic orbit with this set of parameters then six variables are required to represent an orbit with any set of parameters Another set of six parameters that are commonly used are the orbital elements Solar System editIn the Solar System planets asteroids most comets and some pieces of space debris have approximately elliptical orbits around the Sun Strictly speaking both bodies revolve around the same focus of the ellipse the one closer to the more massive body but when one body is significantly more massive such as the sun in relation to the earth the focus may be contained within the larger massing body and thus the smaller is said to revolve around it The following chart of the perihelion and aphelion of the planets dwarf planets and Halley s Comet demonstrates the variation of the eccentricity of their elliptical orbits For similar distances from the sun wider bars denote greater eccentricity Note the almost zero eccentricity of Earth and Venus compared to the enormous eccentricity of Halley s Comet and Eris Distances of selected bodies of the Solar System from the Sun The left and right edges of each bar correspond to the perihelion and aphelion of the body respectively hence long bars denote high orbital eccentricity The radius of the Sun is 0 7 million km and the radius of Jupiter the largest planet is 0 07 million km both too small to resolve on this image Radial elliptic trajectory editA radial trajectory can be a double line segment which is a degenerate ellipse with semi minor axis 0 and eccentricity 1 Although the eccentricity is 1 this is not a parabolic orbit Most properties and formulas of elliptic orbits apply However the orbit cannot be closed It is an open orbit corresponding to the part of the degenerate ellipse from the moment the bodies touch each other and move away from each other until they touch each other again In the case of point masses one full orbit is possible starting and ending with a singularity The velocities at the start and end are infinite in opposite directions and the potential energy is equal to minus infinity The radial elliptic trajectory is the solution of a two body problem with at some instant zero speed as in the case of dropping an object neglecting air resistance See also Free fall Inverse square law gravitational fieldHistory editThe Babylonians were the first to realize that the Sun s motion along the ecliptic was not uniform though they were unaware of why this was it is today known that this is due to the Earth moving in an elliptic orbit around the Sun with the Earth moving faster when it is nearer to the Sun at perihelion and moving slower when it is farther away at aphelion 8 In the 17th century Johannes Kepler discovered that the orbits along which the planets travel around the Sun are ellipses with the Sun at one focus and described this in his first law of planetary motion Later Isaac Newton explained this as a corollary of his law of universal gravitation See also editApsis Characteristic energy Ellipse List of orbits Orbital eccentricity Orbit equation Parabolic trajectoryReferences edit Bate Mueller White 1971 Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics First ed New York Dover pp 11 12 ISBN 0 486 60061 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lissauer Jack J de Pater Imke 2019 Fundamental Planetary Sciences physics chemistry and habitability New York NY USA Cambridge University Press pp 29 31 ISBN 9781108411981 Bate Mueller White 1971 Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics First ed New York Dover p 33 ISBN 0 486 60061 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bate Mueller White 1971 Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics First ed New York Dover pp 27 28 ISBN 0 486 60061 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bate Mueller White 1971 Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics First ed New York Dover p 15 ISBN 0 486 60061 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bate Mueller White 1971 Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics First ed New York Dover p 18 ISBN 0 486 60061 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bate Mueller White 1971 Fundamentals Of Astrodynamics First ed New York Dover p 17 ISBN 0 486 60061 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link David Leverington 2003 Babylon to Voyager and beyond a history of planetary astronomy Cambridge University Press pp 6 7 ISBN 0 521 80840 5Sources editD Eliseo Maurizio M 2007 The First Order Orbital Equation American Journal of Physics 75 4 352 355 Bibcode 2007AmJPh 75 352D doi 10 1119 1 2432126 D Eliseo Maurizio M Mironov Sergey V 2009 The Gravitational Ellipse Journal of Mathematical Physics 50 2 022901 arXiv 0802 2435 Bibcode 2009JMP 50a2901M doi 10 1063 1 3078419 Curtis Howard D 2019 Orbital Mechanics for Engineering Students 4th ed Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 08 102133 0 External links editJava applet animating the orbit of a satellite in an elliptic Kepler orbit around the Earth with any value for semi major axis and eccentricity Apogee Perigee Lunar photographic comparison Aphelion Perihelion Solar photographic comparison http www castor2 ca Portals nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elliptic orbit amp oldid 1187389865, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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