The distance between the perihelion and aphelion of the sun is 10A.U. What is its orbital period in term of years?
2 Answers
The period will be 11.18 years.
Explanation:
The distance between perihelion and aphelion is twice the semi major axis distance. So the semi major axis
Kepler's third law relates the period
As of now, AU = 149597871 km, nearly, and the distance referred is 2 AU. If AU becomes 5 AU, for the same orbital speed, the period might become 5 years.
Explanation:
Approximately, the period is
(circumference) /( average orbital speed )
= (2 pi AU km)/(29.78 km/s}
=31563169 s
= 365.3 d, nearly
= 1 year...
When AU becomes 5 AU, for the same orbital speed, period
becomes 5 years. This phenomenon is virtual.,
Theoretically, we can have infinite number of orbits for a = 5 AU.
The parameter eccentricity e of the orbit is arbitrary. Also, Jupiter
has a = 5.20 AU. Its period is 11.87 years. When the distance is in
AU units and time in Earth-year units,
the dimensional constant of proportionality
in Kepler's third law ( in the normalized form),
(Period in year unit )^2 = (Semi-major axis 1 AU )^3
= 1 (year.year)/(AU.AU.AU).
Indeed, this ( Orbit Period ) - (Mean Sun-Earth distance) near-
exactitude relation is quite handy for use.
By dimensional analysis, the period, of dimension T (time), can be
related to any distance a of dimension L, by including a constant of
proportionality. This is necessary, for dimensional homogeneity.. .