An astronaut working on the Moon tries to determine the gravitational constant G by throwing a Moon rock of mass m with a velocity of v vertically into the sky. The astronaut knows that the moon has a density p of 3340 kg/m^3 and a radius R of 1740 km.
(a) Show with (1) that the potential energy of the rock at height h above the surface is given by:
E=(-4πG/3)mp.R^3/(R+H)
(b) Next, show that the gravitational constant can be determined by:
G=(3/8π)×(v^2/pR^2)×[1-{R/(R+H)}]^-1
(c)What is the resulting G if the rock is thrown with 30 km/h and reaches 21.5 m?
a) the potential energy of a piece with mass m at a distance r from the spherically symmetric object of mass M is
"E = -\\dfrac{GMm}{r}"
If the Moon has radius R and density "\\rho," then "M =\\dfrac43\\pi R^3\\rho" .
"E = -\\dfrac{GMm}{r} = -\\dfrac{\\frac43 \\pi G R^3\\rho m}{r} = -\\dfrac{\\frac43 \\pi G R^3\\rho m}{R+H}" .
b) If H is the maximum height, then the object stops there. Let us determine the total energy of the rock at the surface of the Moon and at the height h
"E_{tot,1} = \\dfrac{mv^2}{2} - \\dfrac{\\frac43 \\pi G R^3\\rho m}{R}" ,
"E_{tot,2} = 0 - \\dfrac{\\frac43 \\pi G R^3\\rho m}{R+H}" .
Therefore,
"\\dfrac{mv^2}{2} = \\dfrac{\\frac43 \\pi G R^3\\rho m}{R} - \\dfrac{\\frac43 \\pi G R^3\\rho m}{R+H} = \\dfrac{\\frac43 \\pi G R^3\\rho m}{R} \\cdot \\Big(1 - \\dfrac{R}{R+H}\\Big)."
"G = \\dfrac{mv^2}{2\\cdot \\frac43\\pi \\rho m R^2 } \\cdot \\Big(1 - \\dfrac{R}{R+H}\\Big)^{-1}, \\\\\n\nG = \\dfrac{3v^2}{8\\pi \\rho R^2 } \\cdot \\Big(1 - \\dfrac{R}{R+H}\\Big)^{-1}."
c) "G = \\dfrac{3v^2}{8\\pi \\rho R^2 } \\cdot \\Big(1 - \\dfrac{R}{R+H}\\Big)^{-1} = \\dfrac{3\\cdot(30000\/3600)^2}{8\\pi\\cdot 3340\\cdot 1740000^2}\\cdot \\Big(1 - \\dfrac{1740000}{1740000+21.5} \\Big)^{-1} = 6.634\\cdot10^{-11}\\,\\mathrm{N\\cdot m^2\/kg^2}"
Comments
Leave a comment