Chapter 4: Problem 16
At what point in a planet's elliptical orbit does it move fastest? At what point does it move slowest? At what point does it sweep out an area at the fastest rate?
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Chapter 4: Problem 16
At what point in a planet's elliptical orbit does it move fastest? At what point does it move slowest? At what point does it sweep out an area at the fastest rate?
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A line joining the Sun and an asteroid is found to sweep out an area of \(6.3 \mathrm{AU}^{2}\) during 2010 . How much area is swept out during 2011? Over a period of five years?
Why does Venus have its largest angular diameter when it is new and its smallest angular diameter when it is full?
Use the Starry Night Enthusiast \({ }^{\mathrm{TM}}\) program to observe the changing appearance of Mercury. Display the entire celestial sphere (select Guides > Atlas in the Favourites menu) and center on Mercury (double-click the entry for Mercury in the Find pane); then use the zoom controls at the right-hand end of the toolbar (at the top of the main window) to adjust your view so that you can clearly see details on the planet's surface. (Click on the + button to zoom in and on the - button to zoom out.) (a) Click on the Time Flow Rate control (immediately to the right of the date and time display) and set the discrete time step to 1 day. Using the Step Forward button, observe and record the changes in Mercury's phase and apparent size from one day to the next. Run time forward for some time to see these changes more graphically. (b) Explain why the phase and apparent size change in the way that you observe.
Suppose that you traveled to a planet with 4 times the mass and 4 times the diameter of the Earth. Would you weigh more or less on that planet than on Earth? By what factor?
What are Kepler's three laws? Why are they important?
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