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Celestial mechanics

Celestial mechanics: Encyclopedia - Celestial mechanics

Celestial mechanics is a division of astronomy dealing with the motions and gravitational effects of celestial objects. The field applies principles of physics, historically Newtonian mechanics, to astronomical objects such as stars and planets. It is distinguished from astrodynamics, which is the study of the creation of artificial satellite orbits. Celestial mechanics - History of celestial mechanics. Although modern analytic celestial mechanics starts 400 years ago with Isaac Newton, prior studies addres ...

Including:

Celestial mechanics, Celestial mechanics - Albert Einstein, Celestial mechanics - Ancient Civilizations, Celestial mechanics - Claudius Ptolemy, Celestial mechanics - Examples of problems, Celestial mechanics - External link, Celestial mechanics - History of celestial mechanics, Celestial mechanics - Isaac Newton, Celestial mechanics - Johannes Kepler, Celestial mechanics - Open problems, Celestial mechanics - Perturbation theory, Astrometry is a part of astronomy and deals with the positions of stars and other celestial bodies, their distances and movements., Astrodynamics is the study and creation of orbits, especially those of artificial satellites., Orbit is the path that an object makes, around another object, whilst under the influence of a source of centripetal force, such as gravity., Satellite is an object that orbits another object (known as its primary). The term is often used to describe an artificial satellite (as opposed to natural satellites, or moons). The common noun moon (not capitalized) is used to mean any natural satellite of the other planets., Celestial navigation is a position fixing technique that was the first system devised to help sailors locate themselves on a featureless ocean.

Celestial mechanics: Encyclopedia - Celestial mechanics



Celestial mechanics

Celestial mechanics is a division of astronomy dealing with the motions and gravitational effects of celestial objects. The field applies principles of physics, historically Newtonian mechanics, to astronomical objects such as stars and planets. It is distinguished from astrodynamics, which is the study of the creation of artificial satellite orbits.

Celestial mechanics - History of celestial mechanics

Although modern analytic celestial mechanics starts 400 years ago with Isaac Newton, prior studies addressing the problem of planetary positions are known going back perhaps 3,000 years.

Celestial mechanics - Ancient Civilizations

The Ancient Babylonians had no mechanistic theories regarding celestial motions, but recognized repeating patterns in the motion of the sun, moon, and planets. They used tabulated positions during similar past celestial alignments to accurately predict future planetary motions.

Imperial Chinese astrologers also observed and tabulated positions of planets and guest stars which can refer to either a comet or a nova. Although their records are a very useful historical source for modern astronomy, there is no known record of them having predicted celestial motions.

The Classical Greek writers speculated widely regarding celestial motions, and presented many mechanisms for the motions of the planets. Their ideas all involved uniform circular motion, and were centered on the earth. None of these proposals seem to have been tested against actual observations.

Celestial mechanics - Claudius Ptolemy

Claudius Ptolemy was a Greek astronomer and astrologer in early Imperial Roman times who wrote a book on astronomy now called the Almagest. The Almagest was the most influential secular book of classical antiquity. Ptolemy selected the best of the astronomical principles of his Greek predecessors, especially Hipparchus, and appears to have combined them either directly or indirectly with tabulations from the Babylonians. Although Ptolemy relied mainly on the work of Hipparchus, he introduced at least one idea, the equant, which appears to be his own, and which greatly improved the accuracy of the predicted positions of the planets. His model solar system fails to correctly predict the apparent sizes of moon, but otherwise is accurate to within the naked-eye observations available to him.

Celestial mechanics - Johannes Kepler

Johannes Kepler was the first to develop the modern laws of planetary orbits, which he did by carefully analyzing the planetary observations made by Tycho Brahe. Johannes Kepler was the first to successfully model planetary orbits to a high degree of accuracy. Years before Isaac Newton had even developed his law of gravitation, Kepler had developed his three laws of planetary motion from empirical observation.

See Kepler's laws of planetary motion and the Keplerian problem for a detailed treatment of how his laws of planetary motion can be used.

Celestial mechanics - Isaac Newton

Isaac Newton is credited with introducing the idea that the motion of objects in the heavens, such as planets, the Sun, and the Moon, and the motion of objects on the ground, like cannon balls and falling apples, could be described by the same set of physical laws. In this sense he unified celestial and terrestrial dynamics.

Using Newton's law of gravitation, proving Kepler's Laws for the case of a circular orbit is simple. Elliptical orbits involve more complex calculations. Using Lagrangian mechanics it is possible to develop a single polar coordinate equation that can be used to describe any orbit, even those that are parabolic and hyperbolic. This is useful for calculating the behaviour of planets and comets and such. More recently, it has also become useful to calculate spacecraft trajectories.

Celestial mechanics - Albert Einstein

After Einstein explained the anomalous precession of Mercury's perihelion, astronomers recognized that Newtonian mechanics did not provide the highest accuracy. Today, we have binary pulsars whose orbits not only require the use of General Relativity for their explanation, but whose evolution proves the existence of gravitational radiation, a discovery that led to a Nobel prize.

Celestial mechanics - Open problems

There are a few open problems in celestial mechanics that await solutions. The solution of the n-body problem remains unsolved for 3 or more bodies. The theory of quantum mechanics has not been merged with the theory of general relativity to produce a so-called "theory of everything". Even though Einstein's theory predicts gravitational waves, this radiation has not been directly observed.

Astrometry is a part of astronomy and deals with the positions of stars and other celestial bodies, their distances and movements., Astrodynamics is the study and creation of orbits, especially those of artificial satellites., Orbit is the path that an object makes, around another object, whilst under the influence of a source of centripetal force, such as gravity., Satellite is an object that orbits another object (known as its primary). The term is often used to describe an artificial satellite (as opposed to natural satellites, or moons). The common noun moon (not capitalized) is used to mean any natural satellite of the other planets., Celestial navigation is a position fixing technique that was the first system devised to help sailors locate themselves on a featureless ocean.

Celestial mechanics - Examples of problems

Celestial motion without additional forces such as thrust of a rocket, is governed by gravitational acceleration of masses due to other masses. A simplification is the n-body problem, where we assume n spherically symmetric masses, and integration of the accelerations reduces to summation.

Examples:

  • 4-body problem: spaceflight to Mars (for parts of the flight the influence of one or two bodies is very small, so that there we have a 2- or 3-body problem; see also the patched conic approximation)
  • 3-body problem:
    • quasi-satellite
    • spaceflight to, and stay at a Lagrangian point

In the case that n=2 (two-body problem), the situation is much simpler than for larger n. Various explicit formulas apply, where in the more general case typically only numerical solutions are possible. It is a useful simplification that is often approximately valid.

Examples:

  • a binary star, e.g. Alpha Centauri (approx. the same mass)
  • a double planet, e.g. Pluto with its moon Charon (mass ratio 0.147)
  • a binary asteroid, e.g. 90 Antiope (approx. the same mass)

A further simplification is based on "standard assumptions in astrodynamics", which include that one body, the orbiting body, is much smaller than the other, the central body. This is also often approximately valid.

Examples:

  • Solar system orbiting the center of the Milky Way
  • a planet orbiting the Sun
  • a moon orbiting a planet
  • a spacecraft orbiting Earth, a moon, or a planet (in the latter cases the approximation only applies after arrival at that orbit)

Either instead of, or on top of the previous simplification, we may assume circular orbits, making distance and orbital speeds, and potential and kinetic energies constant in time. Notable examples where the eccentricity is high and hence this does not apply are:

  • the orbit of Pluto, ecc. = 0.2488 (largest value among the planets of the Solar System)
  • the orbit of Mercury, ecc. = 0.2056
  • Hohmann transfer orbit
  • Gemini 11 flight
  • suborbital flights

Of course, in each example, to obtain more accuracy a less simplified version of the problem can be considered.

Celestial mechanics - Perturbation theory

Perturbation theory comprises mathematical methods that are used to find an approximate solution to a problem which cannot be solved exactly, by starting from the exact solution of a related problem

See also

  • Astrometry is a part of astronomy and deals with the positions of stars and other celestial bodies, their distances and movements.
  • Astrodynamics is the study and creation of orbits, especially those of artificial satellites.
  • Orbit is the path that an object makes, around another object, whilst under the influence of a source of centripetal force, such as gravity.
  • Satellite is an object that orbits another object (known as its primary). The term is often used to describe an artificial satellite (as opposed to natural satellites, or moons). The common noun moon (not capitalized) is used to mean any natural satellite of the other planets.
  • Celestial navigation is a position fixing technique that was the first system devised to help sailors locate themselves on a featureless ocean.

Celestial mechanics - External link

Research

  • Marshall Hampton's research page: Central configurations in the n-body problem

Artwork

  • Celestial Mechanics is a Planetarium Artwork created by D. S. Hessels and G. Dunne

Categories: Celestial mechanics | Astronomy

Other related archives

90 Antiope, Almagest, Alpha Centauri, Astrodynamics, Astrometry, Astronomy, Babylonians, Celestial mechanics, Celestial navigation, Charon, Chinese astrologers, Classical Greek, Claudius Ptolemy, Gemini 11, General Relativity, Greek, Hipparchus, Hohmann transfer orbit, Isaac Newton, Johannes Kepler, Kepler's laws of planetary motion, Keplerian problem, Lagrangian mechanics, Lagrangian point, Mercury, Milky Way, Moon, Newtonian mechanics, Orbit, Perturbation theory, Pluto, Ptolemy, Roman, Satellite, Solar system, Sun, Tycho Brahe, astrodynamics, astronomy, binary asteroid, binary star, cannon, celestial objects, central body, circular orbits, comet, comets, double planet, eccentricity, general relativity, gravitational, gravitational radiation, gravitational waves, modern laws of planetary orbits, motions, n-body problem, natural satellite, nova, open problems, orbital speeds, orbiting body, orbits, physical laws, physics, planetary, planets, quantum mechanics, quasi-satellite, rocket, spacecraft, standard assumptions in astrodynamics, stars, suborbital flights, the patched conic approximation, theory of everything, thrust, trajectories, two-body problem



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Celestial mechanics", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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