11
Comment:
|
673
|
Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
Line 1: | Line 1: |
= E<μr = | #format jsmath = E < μ/r = Climbing out of the Earth's gravity well requires energy, but a launch loop on the rotating Earth can launch to infinity with less than the classical μ/r gravitational escape energy. The difference is taken from the rotational energy of the Earth itself. Assume a spherical planet with mass '''M''' and surface radius '''R'''. The '''standard gravitational parameter''' ~+μ+~ for the planet is the product of the gravitational constant '''G''' and '''M''' : $\mu ~=~ G M $. The gravity at the surface of the planet is $ g(R) ~=~ \mu / R^2 $, and the gravity at radius '''r''' above the surface is $ g(r) ~=~ \mu / r^2 $. For an |
E < μ/r
Climbing out of the Earth's gravity well requires energy, but a launch loop on the rotating Earth can launch to infinity with less than the classical μ/r gravitational escape energy. The difference is taken from the rotational energy of the Earth itself.
Assume a spherical planet with mass M and surface radius R. The standard gravitational parameter μ for the planet is the product of the gravitational constant G and M : \mu ~=~ G M . The gravity at the surface of the planet is g(R) ~=~ \mu / R^2 , and the gravity at radius r above the surface is g(r) ~=~ \mu / r^2 .
For an