Physics Help

minime72706

Member
Sep 7, 2004
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Given the period and mass of a satellite i need to be able to find the altitude, but im not sure how to do that with only two number given. I'm looking for the formulas needed to solve.

A 5500kg satellite orbits earth every 6200 seconds find the altitude and the force of attraction(which i can find after i find the altitude).

Any help is appreciated.
Thanks
 

91TTZ

Lifer
Jan 31, 2005
14,374
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Does the weight even matter in this case? You can have pieces of any size in pretty much any orbit. That's why there's still so much space junk flying around up there. Bolts, washers, debris, etc, can stay in the same orbit as the much larger object it fell off.

With the time it takes to orbit you should be able to find the speed/altitude.
 

TheLonelyPhoenix

Diamond Member
Feb 15, 2004
5,594
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F / m = v^2 / r

F = mg

So...

mg/m = v^2 / r

g = v^2/r

...where r is the distance from the center of the earth, and v is the speed of the orbiting object. Since you have the period, you can find the speed very quickly and thus solve for r, then subtract by the radius of the earth to get your altitude.

Edit: And I haven't taken kinematic physics since high school, so it would be great if someone could double-check that for me.
 

minime72706

Member
Sep 7, 2004
86
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0
Originally posted by: TheLonelyPhoenix
F / m = v^2 / r

F = mg

So...

mg/m = v^2 / r

g = v^2/r

...where r is the distance from the center of the earth, and v is the speed of the orbiting object. Since you have the period, you can find the speed very quickly and thus solve for r, then subtract by the radius of the earth to get your altitude.

But the speed is depenedt on the distance from earth- the farther out it is the faster it has to go to orbit in 6200 seconds-so its two unkowns
 

TheLonelyPhoenix

Diamond Member
Feb 15, 2004
5,594
1
0
Originally posted by: minime72706
Originally posted by: TheLonelyPhoenix
F / m = v^2 / r

F = mg

So...

mg/m = v^2 / r

g = v^2/r

...where r is the distance from the center of the earth, and v is the speed of the orbiting object. Since you have the period, you can find the speed very quickly and thus solve for r, then subtract by the radius of the earth to get your altitude.

But the speed is depenedt on the distance from earth- the farther out it is the faster it has to go to orbit in 6200 seconds-so its two unkowns

The velocity while in rotation should be 2*pi*r/6200, so you can plug that in for v instead and solve for r anyway.
 

minime72706

Member
Sep 7, 2004
86
0
0
Originally posted by: TheLonelyPhoenix
Originally posted by: minime72706
Originally posted by: TheLonelyPhoenix
F / m = v^2 / r

F = mg

So...

mg/m = v^2 / r

g = v^2/r

...where r is the distance from the center of the earth, and v is the speed of the orbiting object. Since you have the period, you can find the speed very quickly and thus solve for r, then subtract by the radius of the earth to get your altitude.

But the speed is depenedt on the distance from earth- the farther out it is the faster it has to go to orbit in 6200 seconds-so its two unkowns

The velocity while in rotation should be 2*pi*r/6200, so you can plug that in for v instead and solve for r anyway.

I fail at reading. I was reviewing the book and found the formula i need r^3=GM(earth)T^2/4*pi^2
Thanks anyways