Two Body Mechanics
Two Body Mechanics
Two Body Mechanics
Relative motion
m1 v 1
r1
r2
r
m2
v2
Figure 1: Masses m1 and m2 in circular orbits
(m1 > m2 ).
r is therefore the distance between the stars. It
is constant in our example, but would vary if the
orbits were elliptical. The two stars must have
the same angular speed ! (otherwise one mass
would catch up the other, and the gravitational
force would not be directed towards the centre of
the circles). The orbital speeds of the two masses
are therefore
v1 D !r1 ;
v2 D !r2 :
The gravitational force between the stars depends
on the inverse-square of their separation, r, and
supplies the centripetal force that keeps them
moving in circles of radii r1 and r2 respectively.
So
Gm1 m2
m1 v12
D
D m1 ! 2 r1
r2
r1
m2 v22
D
D m2 ! 2 r2 :
r2
(1)
(2)
The general elliptical analysis is just beyond the
scope of this course (though not by much). InThe equality of the two right-hand terms gives
stead we will analyse the case of two stars of simr1
m2
ilar mass performing circular orbits about a comD
;
r2
m1
mon centre (Figure 1).
which is just the condition that the common cenLet the stars have masses m1 and m2 , at distances tre of the circles is the centre of mass of the sysr1 and r2 from their common centre. We will de- tem. Using Equations 1 and 2 we can also write
fine the radius vector of the system as
Gm2
Gm1
(3)
!2 D 2 D 2 :
r D r1 C r2 :
r r2
r r1
Also, since
r D r1 C r2 D r1 C
m1
r1 ;
m2
we get
m2 r
:
m1 C m2
Combining this with Equation 3 we get
r1 D
!2 D
G.m1 C m2 /
:
r3
4 r
T2 D
;
G.m1 C m2 /
Speed:
v 2 D GM.2=r
Period:
T2 D
1=a/
4 2 a3
.
GM
i.e.,
3
G.m1 C m2 /
r
D
:
2
T
4 2
This is Keplers third law for circular orbits.
It is always true, even when one mass is much
greater than the other, but is especially useful
when m1 ' m2 . If m1 m2 , then r2 ' r
and the equation reduces to the one-body version derived earlier in the course.
In fact all the earlier results can be applied to
the two-body problem with the following trick
(you will be shown the proof in honours astronomy!). We can define
M D m1 C m2
m1 m2
D
m1 C m2
v D v1 C v2 :
The quantity is called the reduced mass of the
system. Note that if m1 m2 then M ' m1 and
' m2 .
In general, the two-body problem can be
treated as an equivalent one-body problem in
which the reduced mass is orbiting about a
fixed mass M at a distance r.
The reduced mass will describe an imagined
ellipse about M with semi-major axis a D a1 C
GW
2014