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paper 1
topic 6 - astronomy
Circular motion
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Fiki akinsanya
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Cards (20)
Velocity
The speed of an object in a given direction
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Acceleration
The rate of change of
speed
or velocity
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Resultant force
A single force that replaces all the forces acting on an object and causes an object to
accelerate
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Circular motion
When an object follows a circular path, usually at a
constant
speed
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Velocity (object in circular motion)
The velocity of an object travelling in a circle is changing (even when its speed is
constant
) because its direction is changing
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Acceleration (object in circular motion)
An object travelling in a circle is accelerating because its direction (and therefore its
velocity
) is changing
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Centripetal force
The resultant force that causes the
acceleration
of an object travelling in a circle
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Direction of centripetal force
The centripetal force always acts towards the
centre
of a circle
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Gravitational attraction
Provides the
centripetal force
that keeps
satellites
in orbit around
planets
and planets in orbit around
stars
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How the
force of gravity
between two
objects
varies with
distance
The closer the two objects are, the stronger force of gravity between them
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Effect of the force of on velocity
The greater the
force of gravity
between two objects, the greater
acceleration
and therefore the velocity so the object will move faster
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Effect
of
orbit size
on the
speed
of an
satellite
Objects in small orbits travel faster than objects in large orbits
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Polar orbit
Satellites in a polar orbit travel over the
Earth's
poles
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Height above the Earth for a satellite in a polar orbit
The satellites travel as low as 200
km
above
sea level
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Speed of a satellite in a polar orbit
The satellites have a small orbit so travel very fast, at nearly
8,000
m/s
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Geostationary orbit
Satellites in a geostationary orbit take
24 hours
to orbit the Earth so appear to remain above the same point on the Earth's surface
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Height above the Earth for a satellite in a geostationary orbit
The satellites travel around
36,000
km above sea level
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Speed of a satellite in a geostationary orbit
The satellites have a large orbit so travel slower than a satellite in a polar orbit, at around
3,000
m/s
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Relationship between
orbital speed
of a
satellite
and its height above the
Earth's surface
The further from the Earth's surface a satellite is, the slower it travels
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Relationship between orbital speed of planet and its distance from the Sun
The further from the Sun a planet is, the
slower
it travels
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