Title: HSC Science Teacher Professional Development Program Physics
1HSC Science TeacherProfessional Development
ProgramPhysics
- 830am Space and Gravity
- Michael Burton
- 945am Physics of Climate
- Michael Box
- 15 minute tea break
- 1100am The age of silicon semiconductor
materials and devices - Richard Newbury
- 100pm Lunch
2Presentations will appear onwww.phys.unsw.edu.au/
hsc
3Space and GravitySome ideas for HSC Physics
- Michael Burton
- School of Physics
- University of New South Wales
4Gravity and the Planets
- Escaping from a Planetary Surface
- Acceleration due to Gravity
- Escape Velocity
- Geostationary Orbit and the Space Elevator
- Keplers Third Law
- The Planets
- Jupiter and its Moons
- Travelling the Solar System
- Slingshot effect
- Mission to Mars and the Hohmann Transfer Orbit
5What is an Orbit?
- Falling at just the right speed so that we travel
around the planet rather than toward it. - No energy is required to maintain the orbit once
it has been obtained!
6Assumed Knowledge
7Weight and Escape Velocity
- mgGMm/R2 and 1/2mvesc2GMm/R
- Compile for each planet and compare
- e.g. how heavy would a bag of sugar be on Earth,
Mars, Venus and Jupiter? - how fast must you launch it to escape each planet?
Weight Escape Speed (km/s)
Earth 1.0 11
Mars 0.4 5
Venus 0.9 10
Jupiter 2.5 40
8(Geo-)Synchronous Orbit and the Space Elevator
- Synchronous Orbit when
- orbital period rotational period of the planet
- Space Elevator ascends to the synchronous orbit
- Lower escape speed
- 1/2mvesc2GMm/(rsyncrplanet)
9rsync Vescape (surface) Vescape (elevator) Tascent (_at_100 km/hr)
1000 km km/s km/s days
Earth 36 11 4 15
Mars 17 5 2 7
Venus 1532 10 0.7 638
Jupiter 89 60 40 37
10Question and Exercises
- Calculate (geo-)synchronous orbit
- Compare between planets
- Which might be feasible, which impossible?
- How might it be built??? (carbon nanotubes?)
- How massive?
- How long would it take to ascend?
- What gain in reduced escape speed?
- How much more mass for the same thrust?
- (extra energy available for accelerating the
payload)
11Keplers Laws
- Empirical Laws
- Kepler 1 Elliptical orbits, Sun _at_ a focus
- Kepler 2 Equal areas equal times
12Keplers Third Law
- Exercise 1 Research r and T for planets and
investigate the relation between them - Plot r vs. T then log r vs. log T
r T T2/r3
106 km Years yr2/km3
Earth 150 1.0 3x10-25
Mars 228 1.9 3x10-25
Venus 108 0.6 3x10-25
Jupiter 778 11.9 3x10-25
13K3L and the Moons of Jupiter
- Use a web application, e.g.
- jersey.uoregon.edu/vlab/tmp/orbits.html
- Record positions of moons every day (use ruler)
- Plot on graph paper
- Determine orbital period and radius for each
moon. - Do they fit K3L? (yes!)
- What relationship between their periods?
(1248)
14Journey to Mars
- Gravitational Slingshot
- Hohmann Transfer Orbit
15Gravity Assist to the PlanetsCassini mission to
Saturn
- Venus, Venus, Earth, then Jupiter, on way to
Saturn! - Took 6.7 years, with ?V2 km/s
- Hohmann transfer orbit would have taken 6 years
but required a ?V15 km/s impracticable!
16How GravityAssist works
- Relative to Stationary Observer
- Spacecraft enters at -v, Planet moving at U
- Goes into circular orbit
- Moving at Uv relative to surface of planet
- Leaves at Uv relative to surface in opposite
direction - Thus leaves at 2Uv relative to observer
- e.g. Spacecraft moving at 10 km/s encounters
Jupiter moving at 13 km/s. Leaves at 36 km/s! - Conservation of energy and momentum applies
planet must slow (very!) slightly - In practice we would need to fire engines to
escape from a circular orbit. However, one could
enter on a hyperbolic orbit, with a gain in speed
of slightly less than 2U.
17Mars
Discuss!
- The planet Mars, I scarcely need remind the
reader, revolves about the Sun at a mean distance
of 230 million km, and the light and heat it
receives from the Sun is barely half of that
received by this world. It must be, if the
nebular hypothesis has any truth, older than our
world and long before this Earth ceased to be
molten, life upon its surface must have begun its
course. The fact that it is scarcely one seventh
the volume of the Earth must have accelerated its
cooling to the temperature at which life could
begin. It has air and water and all that is
necessary for the support of animated existence.
H.G. Wells, The War of the Worlds, 1898
18(No Transcript)
19Olympus Mons
600 km across x 24 km high!
20The Gorgonum Chaos
21Water on MarsPolar Ice Caps
22(No Transcript)
23Sedimentary Rock layers of time
24Recent water flow on Mars
24 April, 2005
22 December, 2001
25The Hohmann Transfer Orbit
- Most Fuel Efficient orbit to the planets
- Three Parts
- Circular orbit around Earth
- Elliptical orbit, perihelion _at_ Earth, aphelion _at_
Mars - Circular orbit around Mars
Wolfgang Hohmann, German Engineer, 1925
26Energy in an Orbit
Applies for elliptical orbit, semi-major axis
a Etotal GMm/2a constant in an orbit
27Assumptions MadeHohmann Transfer Orbit
- Only considering gravitational influence of the
Sun (OK) - Apply thrust without changing mass of spacecraft
(Wrong!) - Assume circular orbits for the planets (OK)
- Consider only impulsive thrusts (i.e. no slow
burns)
28Energy Changes
- Step 1 Heliocentric orbit around Earth to
elliptical orbit with Earth at perihelion and
Mars at aphelion - E1 GMm/R
- E2 GMm/(RR)/2
- Step 2 Elliptical orbit to heliocentric orbit
around Mars - E3 GMm/R
m50 tonnes Orbit, a EGMm/2a ?E
x 106 km x 1013 J x 1012 J
Earth Orbit 150 -2.2
Transfer Orbit 189 -1.8 4.6
Mars Orbit 228 -1.5 3.0
29Time Launch
- Time taken is half the orbital period for the
elliptical orbit. - Use K3L!
- i.e. T/2 where T2(RR)/23 when measured in
Years and Astronomical Units - T(1.01.5)/23/21.4 years
- Thus it takes 0.7 years
- Launch Window
- Mars covers T/2/Tmars x 360 135.9
- Spacecraft covers 180
- Thus, Launch when Earth 180-135.944.1 behind
Mars
Harder Problem how often do launch windows occur?
30Questions to consider?
- How do we know this is the cheapest fuel orbit?
- Cant be less (wouldnt arrive), neednt be more
(overshoot) - How much change in energy is needed?
- Relate to amount of fuel?
- Best time to launch a few months before
Opposition - Why? (44.1) Why not at Opposition?
- How long will the journey to Mars take?
- Compare to Journey to Moon (3 days), to Jupiter
(2.8 yrs). - How often can we launch (every 2.1 years for
Mars)? - Implications for return journey (first window
after 1.5yrs) - Implications for human exploration of the Solar
System - What do we need humans for, what can a robot do
better? - What about lift-off from Earth, landing on Mars?
31The End