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amount of force and stops it's orbit around the sun. How long would it take for the
earth to plummet into the sun?
Asked by: Mike Assad
Answer
There are two ways to go about this question... One is, bite the bullet and solve
the differential equation, plug the values in, and get the answer. The other is,
use known quantities and some knowledge about orbits.
The equation of motion for a body which has no angular momentum about the sun, as
described, is:
r'' = -GM/r2
Where the primes denote differentiation with respect to time. One would integrate
this twice, the first step gives:
Where R is the initial distance from the sun, here it would be about the distance
of the earth from the sun.
Second integration gets a little trickier, yet still doable; and it yields the
following equation:
Where t is the time measured from the time the body started its motion at distance
R. Now, we want to find t when r goes to zero. It turns out easier than it looks.
The first term on the left vanishes, while the arctangent's argument becomes
infinite, and the arctangent of infinity is Pi/2, we get, after some massaging:
t = sqrt(2*R3/(8*G*M))
Is the time it will take to fall into the sun, ignoring the motion of the sun, and
the size of the sun...
Now how do we evaluate this? The earth's period around the sun is given by:
T = sqrt(4*2*R^3/(G*M))
t = T/(4*sqrt(2))
Which is roughly 64 days and 12 hours, or just over two month's time to say goodbye
to the cruel world, however, it might get considerably hot towards the end...
We know the period of any orbit is dependent only on the semimajor axis; as long as
it is an ellipse with the sun at one focus.
We can take this problem to be one where the orbit is an extremely flat ellipse.
This puts the focus at one end, while the body starts the motion at the other end.
So, what we need to calculate here is the HALF of the period of an orbit for which
the semimajor axis is HALF of R, if you follow the argument.
t = (1/2)*sqrt(4*2*(R/2)3/(GM))
t = (2*R3/(8*G*M))
Also note that the mass of the asteroid does not enter into the equation, as long
as it is not so huge to make the mass of the earth after the collision comparable
to the mass of the sun, in which case we'll have to consider the movement of the
sun as well in the derivation. (This can be taken care of just by using the reduced
mass, but that's another story.)
Answered by: Yasar Safkan, Ph.D. M.I.T., Software Engineer, Istanbul, Turkey
Your proposed asteroid would need to have the same momentum as the mass of the
Earth multiplied by its orbital velocity, but in the opposite direction. One
example would be another Earth-sized object travelling at 18 miles/second. A lower
mass with higher velocity would also do, but you can easily imagine any such
collision completely destroying both objects with little left of the Earth to fall
into the Sun.
Answered by: Paul Walorski, B.A., Part-time Physics Instructor