Dynamics Lecture 19
Dynamics Lecture 19
Circular orbits
The simplest example of an orbit in a central potential is that of a circular orbit where the distance from the origin
is constant, r = a. One immediately deduces then that r = 0 and r = 0 so the orbit equation (323) yields
r4 Fr (r) a3 Fr (a)
r = 2
with r = a = h= . (316)
h m m
The initial conditions clearly need to be such that r2 = h with h given by (316). This can be achieved if all of the
following conditions hold at time t = 0:
The particle is at r(0) = a
It has no radial velocity: r(0)
=0
Its velocity in the direction (tangent to the orbit) v = a is such that the angular momentum mr2 is mh
with h given by (316), namely
h aFr (a)
v = a = =
a m
This is equivalent to the requirement that the force will be
mv 2
Fr (a) =
a
which is precisely the value of the required centripetal force for a circular motion, as we learnt in Lecture 4.
h2 Fr (a + )
3
= . (317)
(a + ) m
Expanding in /a we get:
h2 Fr (a) dFr (a)
1 3 = + . (318)
a3 a m dr m
3 F (a)
Now since for the circular orbit we have, according to equation (316), h = a m r
, eq. (318) reduces to:
3h2 1 dFr (a)
+ = 0. (319)
a4 m dr
If
3h2 1 dFr (a)
>0 (320)
a4 m dr
Mathematics for Physics 3: Dynamics and Dierential Equations 88
then we define
3h2 1 dFr (a)
2
a4 m dr
and deduce that (319) describes harmonic motion, (t) = A cos(t + ), which is bounded by its amplitude A. It
thus follows that if the condition (320) is met, a small perturbation around a circular orbit will remain small. On
the other hand, if the condition (320) is violated the perturbation may grow indefinitely.
It is useful to translate our stability condition for the circular orbit to a condition that does not involve h. This
can be done using the relation established above, equation (316), h2 = a3 Fr (a)/m, yielding:
1 dFr (a) 3
< (321)
Fr (a) dr a
where we used the fact that Fr (a) < 0. As expected, the stability condition depends only on the force law.
Figure 15: Hyperbolic trajectories with eccentricity = 2 in polar coordinates. The origin (from which r is measured)
is the centre of the force. Here both the near branch r() = l/(1+ cos()) and the far branch r() = l/(1+ cos())
are shown, alongside the two asymptotic lines.
where we skipped straightforward algebra in simplifying the square brackets. The result is that the corresponding
force is an attractive square law force.