- #71
belliott4488
- 662
- 1
JANm:
Something occurs to me: you do not seem to have made any references to Newton's Laws in your arguments, e.g. to relate the distance to the central body by use of the fundamental law of gravity.
Are you attempting to solve this problem purely in terms of differential geometry? If so, I wonder if you are treating the acceleration as the second derivative of the position with respect to a parameter t, such as given here:
Something occurs to me: you do not seem to have made any references to Newton's Laws in your arguments, e.g. to relate the distance to the central body by use of the fundamental law of gravity.
Are you attempting to solve this problem purely in terms of differential geometry? If so, I wonder if you are treating the acceleration as the second derivative of the position with respect to a parameter t, such as given here:
That "t" is not time in the usual sense, at least it is not if [tex]\omega[/tex] is constant, as it would typically be in a problem in differential geometry. "t" in this context is just the parameter of the curve, but an object moving on the curve at a rate given by [tex]\omega[/tex]t would not move according to Newton's laws.HallsofIvy said:Motion about an ellipse can be written in parametric equations
[tex]x= a cos(\omega t)[/tex]
[tex]y= b sin(\omega t)[/tex]
where a and b are the semi-axes in the x and y directions, respectively.