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One of those things you suddenly think of for the first time in the middle
of the night.. ![]() Considering long period comets that have dropped in all the way from the Oort cloud; how come they don't just plough straight into the sun? Surely the comets in the cloud are moving very slowly (escape velocity at 1 light year must be very small) and any such transverse (correct term?) velocity will be negligible by the time the comet has plunged that far; with all the time the sun's gravitational pull tugging the comet towards the sun. So how come they miss? Sorry if this question strikes anybody as idiotic. Ian |
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"J" == Jaxtraw writes:
J Considering long period comets that have dropped in all the way J from the Oort cloud; how come they don't just plough straight into J the sun? Surely the comets in the cloud are moving very slowly J (...) and any such transverse (...) velocity will be negligible by J the time the comet has plunged that far; with all the time the J sun's gravitational pull tugging the comet towards the sun. Think back to why the comets orbit at all. Suppose you have a body at some distance from the Sun with no transverse velocity. (In this case, transverse means perpendicular to the line joining the Sun and the body.) What will happen to it? It will simply fall toward the Sun and plunge into it. What if the body has even a little bit of transverse velocity? Then it has some angular momentum, which is given roughly by L = mvr, where r is its distance from the Sun, v is its velocity, and m is its mass. Angular momentum is a conserved quantity, meaning that unless there are *dissipative* forces (like frictional forces) it doesn't change. As the comet falls toward the inner solar system, m changes only very slightly, but r decreases dramatically. In order for L to remain unchanged, v must increase by the same fraction. Thus, the comet has a high transverse velocity and misses the Sun. -- Lt. Lazio, HTML police | e-mail: No means no, stop rape. | http://patriot.net/%7Ejlazio/ sci.astro FAQ at http://sciastro.astronomy.net/sci.astro.html |
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Joseph Lazio wrote:
"J" == Jaxtraw writes: Considering long period comets that have dropped in all the way from the Oort cloud; how come they don't just plough straight into the sun? Surely the comets in the cloud are moving very slowly (...) and any such transverse (...) velocity will be negligible by the time the comet has plunged that far; with all the time the sun's gravitational pull tugging the comet towards the sun. Think back to why the comets orbit at all. Suppose you have a body at some distance from the Sun with no transverse velocity. (In this case, transverse means perpendicular to the line joining the Sun and the body.) What will happen to it? It will simply fall toward the Sun and plunge into it. What if the body has even a little bit of transverse velocity? Then it has some angular momentum, which is given roughly by L = mvr, where r is its distance from the Sun, v is its velocity, and m is its mass. Angular momentum is a conserved quantity, meaning that unless there are *dissipative* forces (like frictional forces) it doesn't change. As the comet falls toward the inner solar system, m changes only very slightly, but r decreases dramatically. In order for L to remain unchanged, v must increase by the same fraction. Thus, the comet has a high transverse velocity and misses the Sun. Many thanks for your reply! It's one of those things that seems (to me anyway) counter-intuitive; which just shows how useless intuition can be ![]() Ian |
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"Joseph Lazio" wrote in message
... "J" == Jaxtraw writes: J Considering long period comets that have dropped in all the way J from the Oort cloud; how come they don't just plough straight into J the sun? Surely the comets in the cloud are moving very slowly J (...) and any such transverse (...) velocity will be negligible by J the time the comet has plunged that far; with all the time the J sun's gravitational pull tugging the comet towards the sun. Think back to why the comets orbit at all. Suppose you have a body at some distance from the Sun with no transverse velocity. (In this case, transverse means perpendicular to the line joining the Sun and the body.) What will happen to it? It will simply fall toward the Sun and plunge into it. What if the body has even a little bit of transverse velocity? Then it has some angular momentum, which is given roughly by L = mvr, where r is its distance from the Sun, v is its velocity, and m is its mass. Angular momentum is a conserved quantity, meaning that unless there are *dissipative* forces (like frictional forces) it doesn't change. As the comet falls toward the inner solar system, m changes only very slightly, but r decreases dramatically. In order for L to remain unchanged, v must increase by the same fraction. Thus, the comet has a high transverse velocity and misses the Sun. As an exercise for the alert reader, calculate the maximum transverse velocity for a body at aphelion at the distance of the Oort Cloud to be able to intersect the surface of the Sun at perihelion. Any velocity in excess of this value guarantees a miss. |
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