fbpx
Wikipedia

Semi-major and semi-minor axes

In geometry, the major axis of an ellipse is its longest diameter: a line segment that runs through the center and both foci, with ends at the two most widely separated points of the perimeter. The semi-major axis (major semiaxis) is the longest semidiameter or one half of the major axis, and thus runs from the centre, through a focus, and to the perimeter. The semi-minor axis (minor semiaxis) of an ellipse or hyperbola is a line segment that is at right angles with the semi-major axis and has one end at the center of the conic section. For the special case of a circle, the lengths of the semi-axes are both equal to the radius of the circle.

The semi-major (a) and semi-minor axis (b) of an ellipse

The length of the semi-major axis a of an ellipse is related to the semi-minor axis's length b through the eccentricity e and the semi-latus rectum , as follows:

The semi-major axis of a hyperbola is, depending on the convention, plus or minus one half of the distance between the two branches. Thus it is the distance from the center to either vertex of the hyperbola.

A parabola can be obtained as the limit of a sequence of ellipses where one focus is kept fixed as the other is allowed to move arbitrarily far away in one direction, keeping fixed. Thus a and b tend to infinity, a faster than b.

The major and minor axes are the axes of symmetry for the curve: in an ellipse, the minor axis is the shorter one; in a hyperbola, it is the one that does not intersect the hyperbola.

Ellipse

The equation of an ellipse is

 

where (hk) is the center of the ellipse in Cartesian coordinates, in which an arbitrary point is given by (xy).

The semi-major axis is the mean value of the maximum and minimum distances   and   of the ellipse from a focus — that is, of the distances from a focus to the endpoints of the major axis

 

In astronomy these extreme points are called apsides.[1]

The semi-minor axis of an ellipse is the geometric mean of these distances:

 

The eccentricity of an ellipse is defined as

 

so

 

Now consider the equation in polar coordinates, with one focus at the origin and the other on the   direction:

 

The mean value of   and  , for   and   is

 

In an ellipse, the semi-major axis is the geometric mean of the distance from the center to either focus and the distance from the center to either directrix.

The semi-minor axis of an ellipse runs from the center of the ellipse (a point halfway between and on the line running between the foci) to the edge of the ellipse. The semi-minor axis is half of the minor axis. The minor axis is the longest line segment perpendicular to the major axis that connects two points on the ellipse's edge.

The semi-minor axis b is related to the semi-major axis a through the eccentricity e and the semi-latus rectum  , as follows:

 

A parabola can be obtained as the limit of a sequence of ellipses where one focus is kept fixed as the other is allowed to move arbitrarily far away in one direction, keeping   fixed. Thus a and b tend to infinity, a faster than b.

The length of the semi-minor axis could also be found using the following formula:[2]

 

where f is the distance between the foci, p and q are the distances from each focus to any point in the ellipse.

Hyperbola

The semi-major axis of a hyperbola is, depending on the convention, plus or minus one half of the distance between the two branches; if this is a in the x-direction the equation is:[citation needed]

 

In terms of the semi-latus rectum and the eccentricity we have

 

The transverse axis of a hyperbola coincides with the major axis.[3]

In a hyperbola, a conjugate axis or minor axis of length  , corresponding to the minor axis of an ellipse, can be drawn perpendicular to the transverse axis or major axis, the latter connecting the two vertices (turning points) of the hyperbola, with the two axes intersecting at the center of the hyperbola. The endpoints   of the minor axis lie at the height of the asymptotes over/under the hyperbola's vertices. Either half of the minor axis is called the semi-minor axis, of length b. Denoting the semi-major axis length (distance from the center to a vertex) as a, the semi-minor and semi-major axes' lengths appear in the equation of the hyperbola relative to these axes as follows:

 

The semi-minor axis is also the distance from one of focuses of the hyperbola to an asymptote. Often called the impact parameter, this is important in physics and astronomy, and measure the distance a particle will miss the focus by if its journey is unperturbed by the body at the focus.[citation needed]

The semi-minor axis and the semi-major axis are related through the eccentricity, as follows:

 [4]

Note that in a hyperbola b can be larger than a.[5]

Astronomy

Orbital period

 
Log-log plot of period T vs semi-major axis a (average of aphelion and perihelion) of some Solar System orbits (crosses denoting Kepler's values) showing that a3 / T2 is constant (green line)

In astrodynamics the orbital period T of a small body orbiting a central body in a circular or elliptical orbit is:[1]

 

where:

a is the length of the orbit's semi-major axis,
  is the standard gravitational parameter of the central body.

Note that for all ellipses with a given semi-major axis, the orbital period is the same, disregarding their eccentricity.

The specific angular momentum h of a small body orbiting a central body in a circular or elliptical orbit is[1]

 

where:

a and   are as defined above,
e is the eccentricity of the orbit.

In astronomy, the semi-major axis is one of the most important orbital elements of an orbit, along with its orbital period. For Solar System objects, the semi-major axis is related to the period of the orbit by Kepler's third law (originally empirically derived):[1]

 

where T is the period, and a is the semi-major axis. This form turns out to be a simplification of the general form for the two-body problem, as determined by Newton:[1]

 

where G is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the central body, and m is the mass of the orbiting body. Typically, the central body's mass is so much greater than the orbiting body's, that m may be ignored. Making that assumption and using typical astronomy units results in the simpler form Kepler discovered.

The orbiting body's path around the barycenter and its path relative to its primary are both ellipses.[1] The semi-major axis is sometimes used in astronomy as the primary-to-secondary distance when the mass ratio of the primary to the secondary is significantly large ( ); thus, the orbital parameters of the planets are given in heliocentric terms. The difference between the primocentric and "absolute" orbits may best be illustrated by looking at the Earth–Moon system. The mass ratio in this case is 81.30059. The Earth–Moon characteristic distance, the semi-major axis of the geocentric lunar orbit, is 384,400 km. (Given the lunar orbit's eccentricity e = 0.0549, its semi-minor axis is 383,800 km. Thus the Moon's orbit is almost circular.) The barycentric lunar orbit, on the other hand, has a semi-major axis of 379,730 km, the Earth's counter-orbit taking up the difference, 4,670 km. The Moon's average barycentric orbital speed is 1.010 km/s, whilst the Earth's is 0.012 km/s. The total of these speeds gives a geocentric lunar average orbital speed of 1.022 km/s; the same value may be obtained by considering just the geocentric semi-major axis value.[citation needed]

Average distance

It is often said that the semi-major axis is the "average" distance between the primary focus of the ellipse and the orbiting body. This is not quite accurate, because it depends on what the average is taken over.

  • averaging the distance over the eccentric anomaly indeed results in the semi-major axis.
  • averaging over the true anomaly (the true orbital angle, measured at the focus) results in the semi-minor axis  .
  • averaging over the mean anomaly (the fraction of the orbital period that has elapsed since pericentre, expressed as an angle) gives the time-average  .

The time-averaged value of the reciprocal of the radius,  , is  .

Energy; calculation of semi-major axis from state vectors

In astrodynamics, the semi-major axis a can be calculated from orbital state vectors:

 

for an elliptical orbit and, depending on the convention, the same or

 

for a hyperbolic trajectory, and

 

(specific orbital energy) and

 

(standard gravitational parameter), where:

v is orbital velocity from velocity vector of an orbiting object,
r is a cartesian position vector of an orbiting object in coordinates of a reference frame with respect to which the elements of the orbit are to be calculated (e.g. geocentric equatorial for an orbit around Earth, or heliocentric ecliptic for an orbit around the Sun),
G is the gravitational constant,
M is the mass of the gravitating body, and
  is the specific energy of the orbiting body.

Note that for a given amount of total mass, the specific energy and the semi-major axis are always the same, regardless of eccentricity or the ratio of the masses. Conversely, for a given total mass and semi-major axis, the total specific orbital energy is always the same. This statement will always be true under any given conditions.[citation needed]

Semi-major and semi-minor axes of the planets' orbits

Planet orbits are always cited as prime examples of ellipses (Kepler's first law). However, the minimal difference between the semi-major and semi-minor axes shows that they are virtually circular in appearance. That difference (or ratio) is based on the eccentricity and is computed as  , which for typical planet eccentricities yields very small results.

The reason for the assumption of prominent elliptical orbits lies probably in the much larger difference between aphelion and perihelion. That difference (or ratio) is also based on the eccentricity and is computed as  . Due to the large difference between aphelion and perihelion, Kepler's second law is easily visualized.

Eccentricity Semi-major axis a (AU) Semi-minor axis b (AU) Difference (%) Perihelion (AU) Aphelion (AU) Difference (%)
Mercury 0.206 0.38700 0.37870 2.2 0.307 0.467 52
Venus 0.007 0.72300 0.72298 0.002 0.718 0.728 1.4
Earth 0.017 1.00000 0.99986 0.014 0.983 1.017 3.5
Mars 0.093 1.52400 1.51740 0.44 1.382 1.666 21
Jupiter 0.049 5.20440 5.19820 0.12 4.950 5.459 10
Saturn 0.057 9.58260 9.56730 0.16 9.041 10.124 12
Uranus 0.046 19.21840 19.19770 0.11 18.330 20.110 9.7
Neptune 0.010 30.11000 30.10870 0.004 29.820 30.400 1.9

1 AU (astronomical unit) equals 149.6 million km.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Lissauer, Jack J.; de Pater, Imke (2019). Fundamental Planetary Sciences: physics, chemistry, and habitability. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 24–31. ISBN 9781108411981.
  2. ^ "Major / Minor axis of an ellipse", Math Open Reference, 12 May 2013.
  3. ^ "7.1 Alternative Characterization". www.geom.uiuc.edu.
  4. ^ "The Geometry of Orbits: Ellipses, Parabolas, and Hyperbolas". www.bogan.ca.
  5. ^ "7.1 Alternative Characterization".

External links

  • Semi-major and semi-minor axes of an ellipse With interactive animation

semi, major, semi, minor, axes, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, js. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Semi major and semi minor axes news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message In geometry the major axis of an ellipse is its longest diameter a line segment that runs through the center and both foci with ends at the two most widely separated points of the perimeter The semi major axis major semiaxis is the longest semidiameter or one half of the major axis and thus runs from the centre through a focus and to the perimeter The semi minor axis minor semiaxis of an ellipse or hyperbola is a line segment that is at right angles with the semi major axis and has one end at the center of the conic section For the special case of a circle the lengths of the semi axes are both equal to the radius of the circle The semi major a and semi minor axis b of an ellipse The length of the semi major axis a of an ellipse is related to the semi minor axis s length b through the eccentricity e and the semi latus rectum ℓ displaystyle ell as follows b a 1 e 2 ℓ a 1 e 2 a ℓ b 2 displaystyle begin aligned b amp a sqrt 1 e 2 ell amp a 1 e 2 a ell amp b 2 end aligned The semi major axis of a hyperbola is depending on the convention plus or minus one half of the distance between the two branches Thus it is the distance from the center to either vertex of the hyperbola A parabola can be obtained as the limit of a sequence of ellipses where one focus is kept fixed as the other is allowed to move arbitrarily far away in one direction keeping ℓ displaystyle ell fixed Thus a and b tend to infinity a faster than b The major and minor axes are the axes of symmetry for the curve in an ellipse the minor axis is the shorter one in a hyperbola it is the one that does not intersect the hyperbola Contents 1 Ellipse 2 Hyperbola 3 Astronomy 3 1 Orbital period 3 2 Average distance 3 3 Energy calculation of semi major axis from state vectors 3 4 Semi major and semi minor axes of the planets orbits 4 References 5 External linksEllipse EditThe equation of an ellipse is x h 2 a 2 y k 2 b 2 1 displaystyle frac x h 2 a 2 frac y k 2 b 2 1 where h k is the center of the ellipse in Cartesian coordinates in which an arbitrary point is given by x y The semi major axis is the mean value of the maximum and minimum distances r max displaystyle r text max and r min displaystyle r text min of the ellipse from a focus that is of the distances from a focus to the endpoints of the major axis a r max r min 2 displaystyle a frac r text max r text min 2 In astronomy these extreme points are called apsides 1 The semi minor axis of an ellipse is the geometric mean of these distances b r max r min displaystyle b sqrt r text max r text min The eccentricity of an ellipse is defined as e 1 b 2 a 2 displaystyle e sqrt 1 frac b 2 a 2 so r min a 1 e r max a 1 e displaystyle r text min a 1 e quad r text max a 1 e Now consider the equation in polar coordinates with one focus at the origin and the other on the 8 p displaystyle theta pi direction r 1 e cos 8 ℓ displaystyle r 1 e cos theta ell The mean value of r ℓ 1 e displaystyle r ell 1 e and r ℓ 1 e displaystyle r ell 1 e for 8 p displaystyle theta pi and 8 0 displaystyle theta 0 is a ℓ 1 e 2 displaystyle a frac ell 1 e 2 In an ellipse the semi major axis is the geometric mean of the distance from the center to either focus and the distance from the center to either directrix The semi minor axis of an ellipse runs from the center of the ellipse a point halfway between and on the line running between the foci to the edge of the ellipse The semi minor axis is half of the minor axis The minor axis is the longest line segment perpendicular to the major axis that connects two points on the ellipse s edge The semi minor axis b is related to the semi major axis a through the eccentricity e and the semi latus rectum ℓ displaystyle ell as follows b a 1 e 2 a ℓ b 2 displaystyle begin aligned b amp a sqrt 1 e 2 a ell amp b 2 end aligned A parabola can be obtained as the limit of a sequence of ellipses where one focus is kept fixed as the other is allowed to move arbitrarily far away in one direction keeping ℓ displaystyle ell fixed Thus a and b tend to infinity a faster than b The length of the semi minor axis could also be found using the following formula 2 2 b p q 2 f 2 displaystyle 2b sqrt p q 2 f 2 where f is the distance between the foci p and q are the distances from each focus to any point in the ellipse Hyperbola EditThe semi major axis of a hyperbola is depending on the convention plus or minus one half of the distance between the two branches if this is a in the x direction the equation is citation needed x h 2 a 2 y k 2 b 2 1 displaystyle frac left x h right 2 a 2 frac left y k right 2 b 2 1 In terms of the semi latus rectum and the eccentricity we have a ℓ e 2 1 displaystyle a ell over e 2 1 The transverse axis of a hyperbola coincides with the major axis 3 In a hyperbola a conjugate axis or minor axis of length 2 b displaystyle 2b corresponding to the minor axis of an ellipse can be drawn perpendicular to the transverse axis or major axis the latter connecting the two vertices turning points of the hyperbola with the two axes intersecting at the center of the hyperbola The endpoints 0 b displaystyle 0 pm b of the minor axis lie at the height of the asymptotes over under the hyperbola s vertices Either half of the minor axis is called the semi minor axis of length b Denoting the semi major axis length distance from the center to a vertex as a the semi minor and semi major axes lengths appear in the equation of the hyperbola relative to these axes as follows x 2 a 2 y 2 b 2 1 displaystyle frac x 2 a 2 frac y 2 b 2 1 The semi minor axis is also the distance from one of focuses of the hyperbola to an asymptote Often called the impact parameter this is important in physics and astronomy and measure the distance a particle will miss the focus by if its journey is unperturbed by the body at the focus citation needed The semi minor axis and the semi major axis are related through the eccentricity as follows b a e 2 1 displaystyle b a sqrt e 2 1 4 Note that in a hyperbola b can be larger than a 5 Astronomy EditOrbital period Edit Log log plot of period T vs semi major axis a average of aphelion and perihelion of some Solar System orbits crosses denoting Kepler s values showing that a3 T 2 is constant green line In astrodynamics the orbital period T of a small body orbiting a central body in a circular or elliptical orbit is 1 T 2 p a 3 m displaystyle T 2 pi sqrt frac a 3 mu where a is the length of the orbit s semi major axis m displaystyle mu is the standard gravitational parameter of the central body Note that for all ellipses with a given semi major axis the orbital period is the same disregarding their eccentricity The specific angular momentum h of a small body orbiting a central body in a circular or elliptical orbit is 1 h a m 1 e 2 displaystyle h sqrt a mu 1 e 2 where a and m displaystyle mu are as defined above e is the eccentricity of the orbit In astronomy the semi major axis is one of the most important orbital elements of an orbit along with its orbital period For Solar System objects the semi major axis is related to the period of the orbit by Kepler s third law originally empirically derived 1 T 2 a 3 displaystyle T 2 propto a 3 where T is the period and a is the semi major axis This form turns out to be a simplification of the general form for the two body problem as determined by Newton 1 T 2 4 p 2 G M m a 3 displaystyle T 2 frac 4 pi 2 G M m a 3 where G is the gravitational constant M is the mass of the central body and m is the mass of the orbiting body Typically the central body s mass is so much greater than the orbiting body s that m may be ignored Making that assumption and using typical astronomy units results in the simpler form Kepler discovered The orbiting body s path around the barycenter and its path relative to its primary are both ellipses 1 The semi major axis is sometimes used in astronomy as the primary to secondary distance when the mass ratio of the primary to the secondary is significantly large M m displaystyle M gg m thus the orbital parameters of the planets are given in heliocentric terms The difference between the primocentric and absolute orbits may best be illustrated by looking at the Earth Moon system The mass ratio in this case is 81 30059 The Earth Moon characteristic distance the semi major axis of the geocentric lunar orbit is 384 400 km Given the lunar orbit s eccentricity e 0 0549 its semi minor axis is 383 800 km Thus the Moon s orbit is almost circular The barycentric lunar orbit on the other hand has a semi major axis of 379 730 km the Earth s counter orbit taking up the difference 4 670 km The Moon s average barycentric orbital speed is 1 010 km s whilst the Earth s is 0 012 km s The total of these speeds gives a geocentric lunar average orbital speed of 1 022 km s the same value may be obtained by considering just the geocentric semi major axis value citation needed Average distance Edit It is often said that the semi major axis is the average distance between the primary focus of the ellipse and the orbiting body This is not quite accurate because it depends on what the average is taken over averaging the distance over the eccentric anomaly indeed results in the semi major axis averaging over the true anomaly the true orbital angle measured at the focus results in the semi minor axis b a 1 e 2 displaystyle b a sqrt 1 e 2 averaging over the mean anomaly the fraction of the orbital period that has elapsed since pericentre expressed as an angle gives the time average a 1 e 2 2 displaystyle a left 1 frac e 2 2 right The time averaged value of the reciprocal of the radius r 1 displaystyle r 1 is a 1 displaystyle a 1 Energy calculation of semi major axis from state vectors Edit In astrodynamics the semi major axis a can be calculated from orbital state vectors a m 2 e displaystyle a frac mu 2 varepsilon for an elliptical orbit and depending on the convention the same or a m 2 e displaystyle a frac mu 2 varepsilon for a hyperbolic trajectory and e v 2 2 m r displaystyle varepsilon frac v 2 2 frac mu mathbf r specific orbital energy and m G M displaystyle mu GM standard gravitational parameter where v is orbital velocity from velocity vector of an orbiting object r is a cartesian position vector of an orbiting object in coordinates of a reference frame with respect to which the elements of the orbit are to be calculated e g geocentric equatorial for an orbit around Earth or heliocentric ecliptic for an orbit around the Sun G is the gravitational constant M is the mass of the gravitating body and e displaystyle varepsilon is the specific energy of the orbiting body Note that for a given amount of total mass the specific energy and the semi major axis are always the same regardless of eccentricity or the ratio of the masses Conversely for a given total mass and semi major axis the total specific orbital energy is always the same This statement will always be true under any given conditions citation needed Semi major and semi minor axes of the planets orbits Edit Planet orbits are always cited as prime examples of ellipses Kepler s first law However the minimal difference between the semi major and semi minor axes shows that they are virtually circular in appearance That difference or ratio is based on the eccentricity and is computed as a b 1 1 e 2 displaystyle frac a b frac 1 sqrt 1 e 2 which for typical planet eccentricities yields very small results The reason for the assumption of prominent elliptical orbits lies probably in the much larger difference between aphelion and perihelion That difference or ratio is also based on the eccentricity and is computed as r a r p 1 e 1 e displaystyle frac r text a r text p frac 1 e 1 e Due to the large difference between aphelion and perihelion Kepler s second law is easily visualized Eccentricity Semi major axis a AU Semi minor axis b AU Difference Perihelion AU Aphelion AU Difference Mercury 0 206 0 38700 0 37870 2 2 0 307 0 467 52Venus 0 007 0 72300 0 72298 0 002 0 718 0 728 1 4Earth 0 017 1 00000 0 99986 0 014 0 983 1 017 3 5Mars 0 093 1 52400 1 51740 0 44 1 382 1 666 21Jupiter 0 049 5 20440 5 19820 0 12 4 950 5 459 10Saturn 0 057 9 58260 9 56730 0 16 9 041 10 124 12Uranus 0 046 19 21840 19 19770 0 11 18 330 20 110 9 7Neptune 0 010 30 11000 30 10870 0 004 29 820 30 400 1 91 AU astronomical unit equals 149 6 million km References Edit a b c d e f Lissauer Jack J de Pater Imke 2019 Fundamental Planetary Sciences physics chemistry and habitability New York Cambridge University Press pp 24 31 ISBN 9781108411981 Major Minor axis of an ellipse Math Open Reference 12 May 2013 7 1 Alternative Characterization www geom uiuc edu The Geometry of Orbits Ellipses Parabolas and Hyperbolas www bogan ca 7 1 Alternative Characterization External links EditSemi major and semi minor axes of an ellipse With interactive animation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Semi major and semi minor axes amp oldid 1119728430, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.