Aluminesis
Member
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2009
- Messages
- 54
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2011
Hey guys, I'm doing past half-yearly papers and I got stumped on a question. Hoping I can get some help here.
Question:
[FONT="]In the launch of a particular satellite, the satellite was release from a rocket such that it moved into a stable orbit around the Earth. After the satellite had completed a number of orbits of Earth, each taking 90 minutes, onboard rockets were used to propel the satellite into a much more distant stable orbit, with a radius 10 times larger than the original. Based on this information, which of the following could be closest to the orbital period of the satellite in the final more distant orbit?[/FONT]
[FONT="] [/FONT]
[FONT="](A) 47.4 hours[/FONT]
[FONT="](B) 38.7 hours [/FONT]
[FONT="](C) 22.5 hours [/FONT]
[FONT="](D) 15 hours [/FONT]
The answer is A. I tried using Kepler's Law of Periods but it didn't work out. Am I approaching it from the wrong angle or am I on the right track but making silly mistakes?
I'd really appreciate it if someone could post the full working out involved with this question. Thanks!
Question:
[FONT="]In the launch of a particular satellite, the satellite was release from a rocket such that it moved into a stable orbit around the Earth. After the satellite had completed a number of orbits of Earth, each taking 90 minutes, onboard rockets were used to propel the satellite into a much more distant stable orbit, with a radius 10 times larger than the original. Based on this information, which of the following could be closest to the orbital period of the satellite in the final more distant orbit?[/FONT]
[FONT="] [/FONT]
[FONT="](A) 47.4 hours[/FONT]
[FONT="](B) 38.7 hours [/FONT]
[FONT="](C) 22.5 hours [/FONT]
[FONT="](D) 15 hours [/FONT]
The answer is A. I tried using Kepler's Law of Periods but it didn't work out. Am I approaching it from the wrong angle or am I on the right track but making silly mistakes?
I'd really appreciate it if someone could post the full working out involved with this question. Thanks!