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suppose the sun were twice as massive a it actually is. What would be the orbital period of a planet at a distance of 10 AU fro...Asked by SW
                Suppose the Sun were twice as massive as it actually is. What would be the orbital period of a planet at a distance of 10AU from the Sun? 
            
            
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                    Answered by
            drwls
            
    For the actual sun's mass, according to  Kepler's third law,
P^2/a^3 = 1 = P^2/1000
P = 31.6 years
For a sun that is twice as massive, the centripetal gravity force is twice as large, so V must increase by a factor of sqrt2 to balance it.
The period will be lower by a factor 1/sqrt2 due to the higher speed
Period = 31.6/1.414 = 22.4 years
    
P^2/a^3 = 1 = P^2/1000
P = 31.6 years
For a sun that is twice as massive, the centripetal gravity force is twice as large, so V must increase by a factor of sqrt2 to balance it.
The period will be lower by a factor 1/sqrt2 due to the higher speed
Period = 31.6/1.414 = 22.4 years
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