In celestial mechanics, a Kepler orbit (or Keplerian orbit, named after the German astronomer Johannes Kepler) is the motion of one body relative to another, as an ellipse, parabola, or hyperbola, which forms a two-dimensional orbital plane in three-dimensional space. A Kepler orbit can also form a straight line. It considers only the point-like gravitational attraction of two bodies, neglecting perturbations due to gravitational interactions with other objects, atmospheric drag, solar radiation pressure, a non-spherical central body, and so on. It is thus said to be a solution of a special case of the two-body problem, known as the Kepler problem. As a theory in classical mechanics, it also does not take into account the effects of general relativity. Keplerian orbits can be parametrized into six orbital elements in various ways.
In most applications, there is a large central body, the center of mass of which is assumed to be the center of mass of the entire system. By decomposition, the orbits of two objects of similar mass can be described as Kepler orbits around their common center of mass, their barycenter.
From ancient times until the 16th and 17th centuries, the motions of the planets were believed to follow perfectly circular geocentric paths as taught by the ancient Greek philosophers Aristotle and Ptolemy. Variations in the motions of the planets were explained by smaller circular paths overlaid on the larger path (see epicycle). As measurements of the planets became increasingly accurate, revisions to the theory were proposed. In 1543, Nicolaus Copernicus published a heliocentric model of the Solar System, although he still believed that the planets traveled in perfectly circular paths centered on the Sun.[1]
In 1601, Johannes Kepler acquired the extensive, meticulous observations of the planets made by Tycho Brahe. Kepler would spend the next five years trying to fit the observations of the planet Mars to various curves. In 1609, Kepler published the first two of his three laws of planetary motion. The first law states:
The orbit of every planet is an ellipse with the sun at a focus.
More generally, the path of an object undergoing Keplerian motion may also follow a parabola or a hyperbola, which, along with ellipses, belong to a group of curves known as conic sections. Mathematically, the distance between a central body and an orbiting body can be expressed as:
where:
r
a
e
\theta
Where
p
Despite developing these laws from observations, Kepler was never able to develop a theory to explain these motions.[2]
Between 1665 and 1666, Isaac Newton developed several concepts related to motion, gravitation and differential calculus. However, these concepts were not published until 1687 in the Principia, in which he outlined his laws of motion and his law of universal gravitation. His second of his three laws of motion states:
The acceleration of a body is parallel and directly proportional to the net force acting on the body, is in the direction of the net force, and is inversely proportional to the mass of the body:Where:
is the force vectorF
is the mass of the body on which the force is actingm
is the acceleration vector, the second time derivative of the position vectora
r
Strictly speaking, this form of the equation only applies to an object of constant mass, which holds true based on the simplifying assumptions made below.
Newton's law of gravitation states:
Every point mass attracts every other point mass by a force pointing along the line intersecting both points. The force is proportional to the product of the two masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between the point masses:where:
is the magnitude of the gravitational force between the two point massesF
is the gravitational constantG
is the mass of the first point massm1
is the mass of the second point massm2
is the distance between the two point massesr
From the laws of motion and the law of universal gravitation, Newton was able to derive Kepler's laws, which are specific to orbital motion in astronomy. Since Kepler's laws were well-supported by observation data, this consistency provided strong support of the validity of Newton's generalized theory, and unified celestial and ordinary mechanics. These laws of motion formed the basis of modern celestial mechanics until Albert Einstein introduced the concepts of special and general relativity in the early 20th century. For most applications, Keplerian motion approximates the motions of planets and satellites to relatively high degrees of accuracy and is used extensively in astronomy and astrodynamics.
To solve for the motion of an object in a two body system, two simplifying assumptions can be made:
The shapes of large celestial bodies are close to spheres. By symmetry, the net gravitational force attracting a mass point towards a homogeneous sphere must be directed towards its centre. The shell theorem (also proven by Isaac Newton) states that the magnitude of this force is the same as if all mass was concentrated in the middle of the sphere, even if the density of the sphere varies with depth (as it does for most celestial bodies). From this immediately follows that the attraction between two homogeneous spheres is as if both had its mass concentrated to its center.
Smaller objects, like asteroids or spacecraft often have a shape strongly deviating from a sphere. But the gravitational forces produced by these irregularities are generally small compared to the gravity of the central body. The difference between an irregular shape and a perfect sphere also diminishes with distances, and most orbital distances are very large when compared with the diameter of a small orbiting body. Thus for some applications, shape irregularity can be neglected without significant impact on accuracy. This effect is quite noticeable for artificial Earth satellites, especially those in low orbits.
Planets rotate at varying rates and thus may take a slightly oblate shape because of the centrifugal force. With such an oblate shape, the gravitational attraction will deviate somewhat from that of a homogeneous sphere. At larger distances the effect of this oblateness becomes negligible. Planetary motions in the Solar System can be computed with sufficient precision if they are treated as point masses.
Two point mass objects with masses
m1
m2
r1
r2
where
r
and
\hat{r
r
Dividing by their respective masses and subtracting the second equation from the first yields the equation of motion for the acceleration of the first object with respect to the second:
where
\alpha
In many applications, a third simplifying assumption can be made:
\mu=GM
M
Under these assumptions the differential equation for the two body case can be completely solved mathematically and the resulting orbit which follows Kepler's laws of planetary motion is called a "Kepler orbit". The orbits of all planets are to high accuracy Kepler orbits around the Sun. The small deviations are due to the much weaker gravitational attractions between the planets, and in the case of Mercury, due to general relativity. The orbits of the artificial satellites around the Earth are, with a fair approximation, Kepler orbits with small perturbations due to the gravitational attraction of the Sun, the Moon and the oblateness of the Earth. In high accuracy applications for which the equation of motion must be integrated numerically with all gravitational and non-gravitational forces (such as solar radiation pressure and atmospheric drag) being taken into account, the Kepler orbit concepts are of paramount importance and heavily used.
Any Keplerian trajectory can be defined by six parameters. The motion of an object moving in three-dimensional space is characterized by a position vector and a velocity vector. Each vector has three components, so the total number of values needed to define a trajectory through space is six. An orbit is generally defined by six elements (known as Keplerian elements) that can be computed from position and velocity, three of which have already been discussed. These elements are convenient in that of the six, five are unchanging for an unperturbed orbit (a stark contrast to two constantly changing vectors). The future location of an object within its orbit can be predicted and its new position and velocity can be easily obtained from the orbital elements.
Two define the size and shape of the trajectory:
a
e
Three define the orientation of the orbital plane:
i
\Omega
\omega
And finally:
\nu
M
T
Because
i
\Omega
\omega
H=r x {
r |
Since the cross product of the position vector and its velocity stays constant, they must lie in the same plane, orthogonal to
H
Because the equation has symmetry around its origin, it is easier to solve in polar coordinates. However, it is important to note that equation refers to linear acceleration
\left(\ddot{r
\left(\ddot{\theta}\right)
\left(\ddot{r}\right)
(\hat{x
(\hat{r
H
We can now rewrite the vector function
r
(see "Vector calculus"). Substituting these into, we find:
This gives the ordinary differential equation in the two variables
r
\theta
In order to solve this equation, all time derivatives must be eliminated. This brings:
Taking the time derivative of gets
Equations and allow us to eliminate the time derivatives of
\theta
r
Using these four substitutions, all time derivatives in can be eliminated, yielding an ordinary differential equation for
r
\theta.
The differential equation can be solved analytically by the variable substitution
Using the chain rule for differentiation gets:
Using the expressions and for
d2r | |
d\theta2 |
dr | |
d\theta |
with the general solution
where e and
\theta0
\tfrac{ds}{d\theta}.
Instead of using the constant of integration
\theta0
\hat{x},\hat{y}
\theta0
\theta
s
r=\tfrac{1}{s}
\tfrac{H2}{\alpha}
Another way to solve this equation without the use of polar differential equations is as follows:
Define a unit vector
u
u=
r | |
r |
r=ru
\ddot{r
Now consider
(see Vector triple product). Notice that
Substituting these values into the previous equation gives:
Integrating both sides:
where c is a constant vector. Dotting this with r yields an interesting result:where
\theta
r
c
Notice that
(r,\theta)
p=\tfrac{|H|2}{\alpha}
e=\tfrac{c}{\alpha}
This is the equation in polar coordinates for a conic section with origin in a focal point. The argument
\theta
Notice also that, since
\theta
r
c
c
where
H=r x
r |
=r x v
v
r
Obviously, the eccentricity vector, having the same direction as the integration constant
c
For
e=0
For
0<e<1,
For
e=1
\tfrac{p}{2}
For
e>1
The following image illustrates a circle (grey), an ellipse (red), a parabola (green) and a hyperbola (blue)
The point on the horizontal line going out to the right from the focal point is the point with
\theta=0
\tfrac{p}{1+e},
\tfrac{p}{1-e}.
\theta
Using the chain rule for differentiation, the equation and the definition of p as
H2 | |
\alpha |
and that the tangential component (velocity component perpendicular to
Vr
The connection between the polar argument
\theta
For an elliptic orbit one switches to the "eccentric anomaly" E for which
and consequently
and the angular momentum H is
Integrating with respect to time t gives
under the assumption that time
t=0
As by definition of p one has
this can be written
For a hyperbolic orbit one uses the hyperbolic functions for the parameterisation
for which one has
and the angular momentum H is
Integrating with respect to time t gets
i.e.
To find what time t that corresponds to a certain true anomaly
\theta
Note that the relations and define a mapping between the ranges
For an elliptic orbit one gets from and that
and therefore that
From then follows that
From the geometrical construction defining the eccentric anomaly it is clear that the vectors
(\cosE,\sinE)
(\cos\theta,\sin\theta)
\left(\cos\tfrac{E}{2},\sin\tfrac{E}{2}\right)
\left(\cos\tfrac{\theta}{2},\sin\tfrac{\theta}{2}\right)
and that
where "
\arg(x,y)
(x,y)
|E-\theta|<\pi
For the numerical computation of
\arg(x,y)
Note that this is a mapping between the ranges
For a hyperbolic orbit one gets from and that
and therefore that
Asand as
\tan
\theta | |
2 |
\tanh
E | |
2 |
This relation is convenient for passing between "true anomaly" and the parameter E, the latter being connected to time through relation . Note that this is a mapping between the rangesand that
\tfrac{E}{2}
From relation follows that the orbital period P for an elliptic orbit is
As the potential energy corresponding to the force field of relation is it follows from,, and that the sum of the kinetic and the potential energyfor an elliptic orbit is
and from,, and that the sum of the kinetic and the potential energy for a hyperbolic orbit is
Relative the inertial coordinate systemin the orbital plane with
\hat{x}
The equation of the center relates mean anomaly to true anomaly for elliptical orbits, for small numerical eccentricity.
This is the "initial value problem" for the differential equation which is a first order equation for the 6-dimensional "state vector"
(r,v)
For any values for the initial "state vector"
(r0,v0)
Define the orthogonal unit vectors
(\hat{r
with
r>0
Vt>0
From, and follows that by setting
and by defining
e\ge0
\theta
whereone gets a Kepler orbit that for true anomaly
\theta
Vr
Vt
If this Kepler orbit then also has the same
(\hat{r
\theta
(r,v)
(r0,v0)
\theta
The standard inertially fixed coordinate system
(\hat{x
\hat{x
Note that the relations and has a singularity when
Vr=0
which is the case that it is a circular orbit that is fitting the initial state
(r0,v0)
See main article: Osculating orbit.
For any state vector
(r,v)
p,e,\theta
r,Vr,Vt
\hat{x},\hat{y}
If now the equation of motion iswhereis a function other thanthe resulting parameters
p
e
\theta
\hat{x
\hat{y
r,
r |
\theta
The Kepler orbit computed in this way having the same "state vector" as the solution to the "equation of motion" at time is said to be "osculating" at this time.
This concept is for example useful in casewhere
is a small "perturbing force" due to for example a faint gravitational pull from other celestial bodies. The parameters of the osculating Kepler orbit will then only slowly change and the osculating Kepler orbit is a good approximation to the real orbit for a considerable time period before and after the time of osculation.
This concept can also be useful for a rocket during powered flight as it then tells which Kepler orbit the rocket would continue in case the thrust is switched off.
For a "close to circular" orbit the concept "eccentricity vector" defined as
e=e\hat{x
i.e.
e
(r,v)