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[[File:Kepler laws diagram.svg|thumb|Illustration of Kepler's laws with two planetary orbits.{{ordered list
| list_style = margin-left:0; list-style-position:inside;
| item_style = margin-top:0.3em;|The orbits are ellipses, with foci ''F''<sub>1</sub> and ''F''<sub>2</sub> for Planet 1, and ''F''<sub>1</sub> and ''F''<sub>3</sub> for Planet 2. The Sun is at ''F''<sub>1</sub>.|The shaded areas ''A''<sub>1</sub> and ''A''<sub>2</sub> are equal, and are swept out in equal times by Planet 1's orbit.|The ratio of Planet 1's orbit time to Planet 2's is <math display="inline">({a_1}/{a_2})^{3/2}</math>.
}}]]
{{Astrodynamics}}


In ], '''Kepler's laws of planetary motion''', published by ] in 1609 (except the third law, and was fully published in 1619), describe the orbits of planets around the Sun. These laws replaced ]s and ] in the ] of ] with ]s and explained how planetary velocities vary. The three laws state that:<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Kepler's Laws |url=http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/kepler.html |access-date=2022-12-13 |website=hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=Orbits and Kepler's Laws |url=https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/resources/310/orbits-and-keplers-laws |access-date=2022-12-13 |website=NASA Solar System Exploration}}</ref>
]
# The orbit of a planet is an ] with the Sun at one of the two ].
# A line segment joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time.
# The square of a planet's ] is proportional to the cube of the length of the ] of its orbit.


The elliptical orbits of planets were indicated by calculations of the orbit of ]. From this, Kepler inferred that other bodies in the ], including those farther away from the Sun, also have elliptical orbits. The second law establishes that when a planet is closer to the Sun, it travels faster. The third law expresses that the farther a planet is from the Sun, the longer its orbital period.
In ], '''Kepler's laws of planetary motion''' are three mathematical laws that describe the motion of ]s in the ]. German ] and ] ''']''' (1571&ndash;1630) discovered them.<ref name=Holton>{{cite book |title=Physics, the Human Adventure |author=Gerald James Holton, Stephen G. Brush |page=Chapter 4 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=czaGZzR0XOUC&pg=PA45&dq=Kepler+%22harmonic+law%22&lr=&as_brr=0#PPA40,M1 |isbn=0813529085 |publisher=Rutgers University Press |year=2001 |nopp=true}}</ref>


] showed in 1687 that relationships like Kepler's would apply in the Solar System as a consequence of his own ] and ].
Kepler studied the ]s (the ]) of ]. Around 1605, Kepler found that Brahe's observations of the planets' positions followed three relatively simple mathematical laws.


A more precise historical approach is found in '']'' and '']''.
Kepler's laws challenged ] and ] astronomy and physics. His assertion that the Earth moved, his use of ellipses rather than ]s, and his proof that the planets' speeds varied, changed ] and ]. Almost a century later ] was able to deduce Kepler's laws from Newton's own ] and his ], using classical Euclidean geometry.


==Comparison to Copernicus==
In modern times, Kepler's laws are used to calculate approximate orbits for ]s, and bodies orbiting the ] of which Kepler was unaware (such as the outer planets and smaller ]s). They apply where any relatively small body is orbiting a larger, relatively massive body, though the effects of ] (e.g. in a low orbit), ] (e.g. ]), and other nearby bodies can make the results insufficiently accurate for a specific purpose.


]'s laws improved the model of ]. According to Copernicus:<ref>{{Cite web |date=2009-07-07 |title=Planetary Motion: The History of an Idea That Launched the Scientific Revolution |url=https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/features/OrbitsHistory |access-date=2022-12-13 |website=earthobservatory.nasa.gov |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Nicolaus Copernicus |url=https://www.history.com/topics/inventions/nicolaus-copernicus |access-date=2022-12-13 |website=history.com |language=en}}</ref>
==Introduction to the three laws==
===First law===
]
:"The ] of every ] is an ] with the sun at a ]."


# The planetary orbit is a circle with epicycles.
At the time, this was a radical claim; the prevailing belief (particularly in ]-based theories) was that orbits should be based on perfect circles. This observation was very significant at the time as it supported the ] of the Universe. This does not mean it loses relevance in a more modern context. Although technically an ellipse is not the same as a circle, most of the planets follow an orbit of low ], meaning that they can be crudely approximated as circles. So it is not very evident from the orbit of the planets that the orbits are indeed elliptic. However, Kepler's calculations proved they were, which also allowed for other heavenly bodies farther away from the ] with highly eccentric orbits (like really long stretched out circles). These other heavenly bodies indeed have been identified as the numerous ]s or ]s by astronomers after Kepler's time. The ] ] was discovered as late as 1930, the delay mostly due to its small size and its highly elongated orbit compared to the other planets.
# The Sun is approximately at the center of the orbit.
# The speed of the planet in the main orbit is constant.


Despite being correct in saying that the planets revolved around the Sun, Copernicus was incorrect in defining their orbits. Introducing physical explanations for movement in space beyond just geometry, Kepler correctly defined the orbit of planets as follows:<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=Gingerich />{{rp|53–54}}
===Second law===
]


# The planetary orbit is ''not'' a circle with epicycles, but an '']''.
:"A ] joining a planet and the sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time."<ref>"" by Jeff Bryant with Oleksandr Pavlyk, ].</ref>
# The Sun is ''not'' at the center but at a '']'' of the elliptical orbit.
# Neither the linear speed nor the angular speed of the planet in the orbit is constant, but the '']'' (closely linked historically with the concept of ]) is constant.


The ] of the ] makes the time from the ] to the ], around 186 days, unequal to the time from the September equinox to the March equinox, around 179 days. A diameter would cut the orbit into equal parts, but the plane through the Sun parallel to the ] of the Earth cuts the orbit into two parts with areas in a 186 to 179 ratio, so the eccentricity of the orbit of the Earth is approximately
This is also known as the law of equal areas. To understand this let us suppose a planet takes one day to travel from ] ''A'' to point ''B''. The lines from the Sun to points ''A'' and ''B'', together with the planet orbit, will define a (roughly ]) area. This same area will be covered every day regardless of where in its orbit the planet is. Now as the first law states that the planet follows an ellipse, the planet is at different distances from the Sun at different parts in its orbit. This leads to the conclusion that the planet has to move faster when it is closer to the sun so that it sweeps an equal area.
:<math>e \approx \frac{\pi}{4} \frac{186 - 179}{186 + 179} \approx 0.015,</math>


which is close to the correct value (0.016710218). The accuracy of this calculation requires that the two dates chosen be along the elliptical orbit's minor axis and that the midpoints of each half be along the major axis. As the two dates chosen here are equinoxes, this will be correct when ], the date the Earth is closest to the Sun, falls on a ]. The current perihelion, near January 4, is fairly close to the solstice of December 21 or 22.
Kepler's second law is an additional observation on top of his first law. It is equivalent to the fact that the net tangential force involved in an elliptical orbit, as per his first law, is zero. The quantity 'areal velocity' is very closely related to angular momentum, and so for the same reasons, Kepler's second law is also a statement of the conservation of ].


==Nomenclature==
Mathematically, Kepler's second law can be expressed as <math> 2\dot r\dot\theta + r\ddot\theta = 0</math>. Although the two terms in this equation sum to zero mathematically, they still exist individually. They do not cancel each other out physically. As in the case of ], we have a situation in which one law contains two distinct aspects.


It took nearly two centuries for the current formulation of Kepler's work to take on its settled form. ]'s ''Eléments de la philosophie de Newton'' (''Elements of Newton's Philosophy'') of 1738 was the first publication to use the terminology of "laws".<ref>Voltaire, ''Eléments de la philosophie de Newton'' (London: 1738). See, for example:
===Third law===
Planets distant from the sun have longer orbital periods than close planets. Kepler's third law describes this fact quantitatively.


* ''"Par une des grandes loix de Kepler, toute Planete décrit des aires égales en temp égaux : par une autre loi non-moins sûre, chaque Planete fait sa révolution autour du Soleil en telle sort, que si, sa moyenne distance au Soleil est 10. prenez le cube de ce nombre, ce qui sera 1000., & le tems de la révolution de cette Planete autour du Soleil sera proportionné à la racine quarrée de ce nombre 1000."'' (By one of the great laws of Kepler, each planet describes equal areas in equal times; by another law no less certain, each planet makes its revolution around the sun in such a way that if its mean distance from the sun is 10, take the cube of that number, which will be 1000, and the time of the revolution of that planet around the sun will be proportional to the square root of that number 1000.)
:"The ] of the ] of a planet is directly ] to the ] of the ] of its orbit."
* ''"Il est donc prouvé par la loi de Kepler & par celle de Neuton, que chaque Planete gravite vers le Soleil, ..."'' (It is thus proved by the law of Kepler and by that of Newton, that each planet revolves around the sun ...)</ref><ref name="Wilson 1994">{{cite journal
|last=Wilson |first=Curtis |date=May 1994 |title=Kepler's Laws, So-Called |journal=HAD News |issue=31 |pages=1–2 |url=https://had.aas.org/sites/had.aas.org/files/HADN31.pdf
|access-date=December 27, 2016 }}</ref> The '']'' in its article on Kepler (p.&nbsp;620) states that the terminology of scientific laws for these discoveries was current at least from the time of ].<ref>De la Lande, ''Astronomie'', vol. 1 (Paris: Desaint & Saillant, 1764). See, for example:
* ''"... mais suivant la fameuse loi de Kepler, qui sera expliquée dans le Livre suivant (892), le rapport des temps périodiques est toujours plus grand que celui des distances, une planete cinq fois plus éloignée du soleil, emploie à faire sa révolution douze fois plus de temps ou environ; ..."'' (... but according to the famous law of Kepler, which will be explained in the following book (para. 892), the ratio of the periods is always greater than that of the distances a planet five times farther from the sun, requires about twelve times or so more time to make its revolution ...)
* ''"Les Quarrés des Temps périodiques sont comme les Cubes des Distances. 892. La plus fameuse loi du mouvement des planetes découverte par Kepler, est celle du repport qu'il y a entre les grandeurs de leurs orbites, & le temps qu'elles emploient à les parcourir; ..."'' (The squares of the periods are as the cubes of the distances. 892. The most famous law of the movement of the planets discovered by Kepler is that of the relation between the sizes of their orbits and the times that the require to traverse them; ...)
* ''"Les Aires sont proportionnelles au Temps. 895. Cette loi générale du mouvement des planetes devenue si importante dans l'Astronomie, sçavior, que les aires sont proportionnelles au temps, est encore une des découvertes de Kepler; ..."'' (Areas are proportional to times. 895. This general law of the movement of the planets become so important in astronomy, namely, that areas are proportional to times, is one of Kepler's discoveries; ...)
* ''"On a appellé cette loi des aires proportionnelles aux temps, Loi de Kepler, aussi bien que celle de l'article 892, du nome de ce célebre Inventeur; ..."'' (One called this law of areas proportional to times (the law of Kepler) as well as that of para. 892, by the name of that celebrated inventor; ... )</ref> It was the exposition of ], in ''An account of the astronomical discoveries of Kepler'' (1814) that made up the set of three laws, by adding in the third.<ref>Robert Small, ''An account of the astronomical discoveries of Kepler'' (London: J Mawman, 1804), </ref> Small also claimed, against the history, that these were ]s, based on ].<ref name="Wilson 1994"/><ref>Robert Small, (London: J. Mawman, 1804).</ref>


Further, the current usage of "Kepler's Second Law" is something of a misnomer. Kepler had two versions, related in a qualitative sense: the "distance law" and the "area law". The "area law" is what became the Second Law in the set of three; but Kepler did himself not privilege it in that way.<ref name="Stephenson1994">{{cite book|author=Bruce Stephenson|title=Kepler's Physical Astronomy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pxCYAeOqJg8C&pg=PA170|date=1994|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=978-0-691-03652-6|page=170}}</ref>
Symbolically:


==History==
:<math> {P^2} \propto {a^3} </math>
Kepler published his first two laws about planetary motion in 1609,<ref>Astronomia nova Aitiologitis, seu Physica Coelestis tradita Commentariis de Motibus stellae Martis ex observationibus G.V. Tychnonis.Prague 1609; Engl. tr. W.H. Donahue, Cambridge 1992.</ref> having found them by analyzing the astronomical observations of ].<ref>In his ''Astronomia nova'', Kepler presented only a proof that Mars' orbit is elliptical. Evidence that the other known planets' orbits are elliptical was presented only in 1621.<br>
See: Johannes Kepler, ''Astronomia nova'' ... (1609), After having rejected circular and oval orbits, Kepler concluded that Mars' orbit must be elliptical. From the top of page 285: ''"Ergo ellipsis est Planetæ iter; ... "'' (Thus, an ellipse is the planet's path; ... ) Later on the same page: ''" ... ut sequenti capite patescet: ubi simul etiam demonstrabitur, nullam Planetæ relinqui figuram Orbitæ, præterquam perfecte ellipticam; ... "'' ( ... as will be revealed in the next chapter: where it will also then be proved that any figure of the planet's orbit must be relinquished, except a perfect ellipse; ... ) And then: ''"Caput LIX. Demonstratio, quod orbita Martis, ... , fiat perfecta ellipsis: ... "'' (Chapter 59. Proof that Mars' orbit, ... is a perfect ellipse: ... ) The geometric proof that Mars' orbit is an ellipse appears as Protheorema XI on pages 289–290.<br>
Kepler stated that every planet travels in elliptical orbits having the Sun at one focus in: Johannes Kepler, ''Epitome Astronomiae Copernicanae'' (Linz ("Lentiis ad Danubium"), (Austria): Johann Planck, 1622), book 5, part 1, III. De Figura Orbitæ (III. On the figure of orbits), From p. 658: ''"Ellipsin fieri orbitam planetæ ... "'' (Of an ellipse is made a planet's orbit ... ). From p. 659: ''" ... Sole (Foco altero huius ellipsis) ... "'' ( ... the Sun (the other focus of this ellipse) ... ).</ref><ref name=Holton>{{cite book
|title=Physics, the Human Adventure: From Copernicus to Einstein and Beyond
|author=Holton, Gerald James |author2=Brush, Stephen G. |pages=40–41
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=czaGZzR0XOUC&pg=PA40
|edition=3rd paperback |isbn=978-0-8135-2908-0 |publisher=Rutgers University Press
|location=Piscataway, NJ |access-date=December 27, 2009 |date=2001}}</ref><ref>In his ''Astronomia nova'' ... (1609), Kepler did not present his second law in its modern form. He did that only in his ''Epitome'' of 1621. Furthermore, in 1609, he presented his second law in two different forms, which scholars call the "distance law" and the "area law".
* His "distance law" is presented in: ''"Caput XXXII. Virtutem quam Planetam movet in circulum attenuari cum discessu a fonte."'' (Chapter 32. The force that moves a planet circularly weakens with distance from the source.) See: Johannes Kepler, ''Astronomia nova'' ... (1609), , Kepler states: ''" ... , quanto longior est αδ quam αε, tanto diutius moratur Planeta in certo aliquo arcui excentrici apud δ, quam in æquali arcu excentrici apud ε."'' ( ... , as αδ is longer than αε, so much longer will a planet remain on a certain arc of the eccentric near δ than on an equal arc of the eccentric near ε.) That is, the farther a planet is from the Sun (at the point α), the slower it moves along its orbit, so a radius from the Sun to a planet passes through equal areas in equal times. However, as Kepler presented it, his argument is accurate only for circles, not ellipses.
* His "area law" is presented in: ''"Caput LIX. Demonstratio, quod orbita Martis, ... , fiat perfecta ellipsis: ... "'' (Chapter 59. Proof that Mars' orbit, ... , is a perfect ellipse: ... ), Protheorema XIV and XV, On the top p. 294, it reads: ''"Arcum ellipseos, cujus moras metitur area AKN, debere terminari in LK, ut sit AM."'' (The arc of the ellipse, of which the duration is delimited by the area AKM, should be terminated in LK, so that it is AM.) In other words, the time that Mars requires to move along an arc AM of its elliptical orbit is measured by the area of the segment AMN of the ellipse (where N is the position of the Sun), which in turn is proportional to the section AKN of the circle that encircles the ellipse and that is tangent to it. Therefore, the area that is swept out by a radius from the Sun to Mars as Mars moves along an arc of its elliptical orbit is proportional to the time that Mars requires to move along that arc. Thus, a radius from the Sun to Mars sweeps out equal areas in equal times.


In 1621, Kepler restated his second law for any planet: Johannes Kepler, ''Epitome Astronomiae Copernicanae'' (Linz ("Lentiis ad Danubium"), (Austria): Johann Planck, 1622), book 5, . From page 668: ''"Dictum quidem est in superioribus, divisa orbita in particulas minutissimas æquales: accrescete iis moras planetæ per eas, in proportione intervallorum inter eas & Solem."'' (It has been said above that, if the orbit of the planet is divided into the smallest equal parts, the times of the planet in them increase in the ratio of the distances between them and the sun.) That is, a planet's speed along its orbit is inversely proportional to its distance from the Sun. (The remainder of the paragraph makes clear that Kepler was referring to what is now called angular velocity.)</ref><ref name=Gingerich>{{cite journal|url=https://pubs.aip.org/physicstoday/article-pdf/64/9/50/9881314/50_1_online.pdf|title= The great Martian catastrophe and how Kepler fixed it |journal=Physics Today|date= 2011 |volume=64|issue=9|pages=50–54|doi=10.1063/PT.3.1259|access-date=27 July 2023 |last1= Gingerich |first1= Owen |bibcode= 2011PhT....64i..50G }}</ref>{{rp|53}} Kepler's third law was published in 1619.<ref name = "Kepler 1619">Johannes Kepler, ''Harmonices Mundi'' (Linz, (Austria): Johann Planck, 1619), book 5, chapter 3, From the bottom of p. 189: ''"Sed res est certissima exactissimaque quod ''proportio qua est inter binorum quorumcunque Planetarum tempora periodica, sit præcise sesquialtera proportionis'' mediarum distantiarum, ... "'' (But it is absolutely certain and exact that the ''proportion between the periodic times of any two planets is precisely the sesquialternate proportion'' of their mean distances, ... ")<br>
where <math>P</math> is the orbital period of planet and <math>a</math> is the semimajor axis of the orbit.
An English translation of Kepler's ''Harmonices Mundi'' is available as: Johannes Kepler with E. J. Aiton, A. M. Duncan, and ], trans., ''The Harmony of the World'' (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: American Philosophical Society, 1997); see especially .</ref><ref name=Holton /> Kepler had believed in the ] of the Solar System, which called for circular orbits, but he could not reconcile Brahe's highly precise observations with a circular fit to Mars' orbit – Mars coincidentally having the highest ] of all planets except Mercury.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.windows2universe.org/?page=/our_solar_system/planets_table.html
|title=Data Table for Planets and Dwarf Planets |website=Windows to the Universe
|date=9 October 2008
|author=National Earth Science Teachers Association
|access-date=2 August 2018
}}</ref> His first law reflected this discovery.


In 1621, Kepler noted that his third law applies to the ] of ].<ref group="Nb">In 1621, Johannes Kepler noted that Jupiter's moons obey (approximately) his third law in his '']'' (Linz ("Lentiis ad Danubium"), (Austria): Johann Planck, 1622), book 4, part 2, . From pp. 554–555: ''" ... plane ut est cum sex planet circa Solem, ... prodit Marius in suo mundo Ioviali ista 3.5.8.13 (vel 14. Galilæo) ... Periodica vero tempora prodit idem Marius ... sunt maiora simplis, minora vero duplis."'' (... just as it is clearly among the six planets around the Sun, so also it is among the four of Jupiter, because around the body of Jupiter any that can go farther from it, orbits slower, and even that is not in the same proportion, but greater ; that is, 3/2 (''sescupla'') of the proportion of each of the distances from Jupiter, which is clearly the very as is used for the six planets above. In his ''The World of Jupiter'' , "Marius" presents these distances, from Jupiter, of the four of Jupiter: 3, 5, 8, 13 (or 14 Galileo) ... Mayr presents their time periods: 1 day 18 1/2 hours, 3 days 13 1/3 hours, 7 days 2 hours, 16 days 18 hours: for all the proportion is greater than double, thus greater than of the distances 3, 5, 8, 13 or 14, although less than of the squares, which double the proportions of the distances, namely 9, 25, 64, 169 or 196, just as 3/2 is also greater than 1 but less than 2.)</ref> ] also made this observation in 1643.<ref group="Nb">Godefroy Wendelin wrote a letter to Giovanni Battista Riccioli about the relationship between the distances of the Jovian moons from Jupiter and the periods of their orbits, showing that the periods and distances conformed to Kepler's third law. See: Joanne Baptista Riccioli, ''Almagestum novum'' ... (Bologna (Bononia), (Italy): Victor Benati, 1651), volume 1, In the margin beside the relevant paragraph is printed: ''Vendelini ingeniosa speculatio circa motus & intervalla satellitum Jovis''. (Wendelin's clever speculation about the movement and distances of Jupiter's satellites.) From p. 492: ''"III. Non minus Kepleriana ingeniosa est Vendelini ... & D. 7. 164/1000. pro penextimo, & D. 16. 756/1000. pro extimo."'' (No less clever Kepler's is the most keen astronomer Wendelin's investigation of the proportion of the periods and distances of Jupiter's satellites, which he had communicated to me with great generosity a very long and very learned letter. So, just as in the larger planets, the planets' mean distances from the Sun are respectively in the 3/2 ratio of their periods; so the distances of these minor planets of Jupiter from Jupiter (which are 3, 5, 8, and 14) are respectively in the 3/2 ratio of periods (which are 1.769 days for the innermost , 3.554 days for the next to the innermost , 7.164 days for the next to the outermost , and 16.756 days for the outermost ).)</ref> The second law, in the "area law" form, was contested by ] in a book from 1664, but by 1670 his '']'' were in its favour.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mercator |first1=Nicolaus |title=Nicolai Mercatoris Hypothesis astronomica nova, et consensus eius cum observationibus |trans-title=Nicolaus Mercator's new astronomical hypothesis, and its agreement with observations |date=1664 |publisher=Leybourn |location=London, England |language=Latin}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Mercator |first1=Nic. |title=Some considerations of Mr. Nic. Mercator, concerning the geometrick and direct method of signior Cassini for finding the apogees, excentricities, and anomalies of the planets; ... |journal=Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London |date=25 March 1670 |volume=5 |issue=57 |pages=1168–1175 |doi=10.1098/rstl.1670.0018 |url=https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rstl.1670.0018 |language=Latin|url-access=subscription }} Mercator criticized Cassini's method of finding, from three observations, an orbit's line of apsides. Cassini had assumed (wrongly) that planets move uniformly along their elliptical orbits. From p. 1174: ''"Sed cum id Observationibus nequaquam congruere animadverteret, mutavit sententiam, & lineam veri motus Planetæ æqualibus temporibus æquales areas Ellipticas verrere professus est: ... "'' (But when he noticed that it didn't agree at all with observations, he changed his thinking, and he declared that a line a planet's true motion, sweeps out equal areas of an ellipse in equal periods of time: ... )</ref> As the century proceeded it became more widely accepted.<ref>{{cite book|author=Wilbur Applebaum|title=Encyclopedia of the Scientific Revolution: From Copernicus to Newton|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=k43Q9RHuGXgC&pg=PT603|date=2000|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-135-58255-5|page=603|bibcode=2000esrc.book.....A}}</ref> The reception in Germany changed noticeably between 1688, the year in which Newton's '']'' was published and was taken to be basically Copernican, and 1690, by which time work of ] on Kepler had been published.<ref>{{cite book|author=Roy Porter|author-link=Roy Porter|title=The Scientific Revolution in National Context|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_0521396999|url-access=registration|date=1992|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-39699-8|page=}}</ref>
The ] is the same for any planet around the sun.


Newton was credited with understanding that the second law is not special to the inverse square law of gravitation, being a consequence just of the radial nature of that law, whereas the other laws do depend on the inverse square form of the attraction. ] and ] much later identified a symmetry principle in the ] of planetary motion (the ] O(4) acting) which accounts for the first and third laws in the case of Newtonian gravitation, as ] does via rotational symmetry for the second law.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Victor Guillemin|author2=Shlomo Sternberg|title=Variations on a Theme by Kepler|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3NXFth0gDQgC&pg=PR5|date=2006|publisher=American Mathematical Soc.|isbn=978-0-8218-4184-6|page=5}}</ref>
:<math>\frac{P_{planet}^2}{a_{planet}^3} = \frac{P_{earth}^2}{a_{earth}^3}. </math>


==Formulary==
So the constant is 1 (])<sup>2</sup>(])<sup>&minus;3</sup> or 2.97473&times;10<sup>&minus;19</sup> s<sup>2</sup>m<sup>&minus;3</sup>. See the actual figures: ].
The mathematical model of the kinematics of a planet subject to the laws allows a large range of further calculations.


===First law ===
For example, suppose planet A is four times as far from the sun as planet B. Then planet A must traverse four times the distance of Planet B each orbit, and moreover it turns out that planet A travels at half the speed of planet B. In total it takes 4×2=8 times as long for planet A to travel an orbit, in agreement with the law (8<sup>2</sup>=4<sup>3</sup>).
Kepler's first law states that:


<blockquote>The orbit of every planet is an ellipse with the sun at one of the two ].</blockquote>
This law used to be known as the '''harmonic law'''.<ref name=Holton3>{{cite book |title=Physics, the Human Adventure |author=Gerald James Holton, Stephen G. Brush |page=45 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=czaGZzR0XOUC&pg=PA45&dq=Kepler+%22harmonic+law%22&lr=&as_brr=0 |isbn=0813529085 |publisher=Rutgers University Press |year=2001}}</ref>


]
==Zero eccentricity==
Kepler's laws refine upon the model of ]. If the eccentricity of a planetary ] is zero, then Kepler's laws state:
#The planetary orbit is a circle with the sun in the center.
#The speed of the planet in the orbit is constant
#The square of the ] is proportionate to the ] of the distance from the sun.
Actually the eccentricities of the orbits of the six planets known to Copernicus and Kepler are quite small, so this gives excellent approximations to the planetary motions, but Kepler's laws give even better fit to the observations.


] marked by large dots. For {{nowrap|θ {{=}} 0°}}, {{nowrap|''r'' {{=}} ''r''{{sub|min}}}} and for {{nowrap|θ {{=}} 180°}}, {{nowrap|''r'' {{=}} ''r''{{sub|max}}}}.]]
Because the ] was considered to be ''normal'', a deviation from this motion was considered an ''']'''. Kepler's corrections to the Copernican model are not at all obvious:
#The planetary orbit is ''not'' a circle, but an ''ellipse'', and the sun is ''not'' in the center of the orbit, but in a ''focal point''.
#Neither the speed nor the angular speed of the planet in the orbit is constant, but the ''area speed'' is constant.
#The square of the ] is proportionate to the cube of the ''mean between the maximum and minimum'' distances from the sun.


Mathematically, an ellipse can be represented by the formula:
The time from the March ] to the September equinox is around 186 days, while the time from the September equinox to the March equinox is only around 179 days. This elementary observation shows, using Kepler's laws, that the eccentricity of the orbit of the earth is not exactly zero. The intersection between the plane of the ] and the plane of the ] cuts the orbit into two parts having areas in the proportion 186 to 179, while a diameter cuts the orbit into equal parts. So the eccentricity of the orbit of the earth is approximately
:<math>\varepsilon\approx\frac \pi 4 \frac {186-179}{186+179}=0.015</math> :<math>r = \frac{p}{1 + \varepsilon\, \cos\theta},</math>
which is close to the correct value. (See ]).


where <math>p</math> is the ], ''ε'' is the ] of the ellipse, ''r'' is the distance from the Sun to the planet, and ''θ'' is the angle to the planet's current position from its closest approach, as seen from the Sun. So (''r'',&nbsp;''θ'') are ].
==Nonzero planetary mass==
The ] of a planet moving according to Kepler's laws can be shown to be directed towards the sun, and the magnitude of the acceleration is in inverse proportion to the square of the distance from the sun. ] assumed that actually all bodies in the world attract one another with a force of ]. As the planets have small masses compared to that of the sun, the orbits obey Kepler's laws approximately. Newton's model improves Kepler's model to give better fit to the observations.


For an ellipse 0&nbsp;<&nbsp;''ε''&nbsp;<&nbsp;1 ; in the limiting case ''ε'' = 0, the orbit is a circle with the Sun at the centre (i.e. where there is zero eccentricity).
Deviations from Kepler's laws due to attraction from planets are called ]s.


At ''θ'' = 0°, ], the distance is minimum
The proportionality constant in Kepler's third law is related to the masses according to the following expression:<ref name=Holton2>{{cite book |title=Physics, the Human Adventure |author=Gerald James Holton, Stephen G. Brush |page=136 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=czaGZzR0XOUC&pg=PA45&dq=Kepler+%22harmonic+law%22&lr=&as_brr=0#PPA136,M1 |isbn=0813529085 |publisher=Rutgers University Press |year=2001}}</ref>
:<math>r_\min = \frac{p}{1 + \varepsilon}</math>


At ''θ'' = 90° and at ''θ'' = 270° the distance is equal to <math>p</math>.
:<math>\left({\frac{P}{2\pi}}\right)^2 = {a^3 \over G (M+m)}, </math>
where ''P'' is time per ] and ''P''/2π is time per ]. <math>G</math> is the ], <math>M</math> is the mass of the sun, and <math>m</math> is the mass of the planet. The discrepancy in Kepler's constant due to the mass of Jupiter is approximately a tenth of a percent. (See data tabulated at ]).


At ''θ'' = 180°, ], the distance is maximum (by definition, aphelion is – invariably – perihelion plus 180°)
==Position as a function of time==
:<math>r_\max = \frac{p}{1 - \varepsilon}</math>


The ] ''a'' is the ] between ''r''<sub>min</sub> and ''r''<sub>max</sub>:
Kepler used these three laws for computing the position of a planet as a function of time. His method involves the solution of a ] called Kepler's equation.
:<math>\begin{align}
a &= \frac{r_\max + r_\min}{2} \\
a &= \frac{p}{1 - \varepsilon^2}
\end{align}</math>


The ] ''b'' is the ] between ''r''<sub>min</sub> and ''r''<sub>max</sub>:
===Mathematics of the ellipse===
:<math>\begin{align}
{{main|Ellipse}}
b &= \sqrt{r_\max r_\min} \\
]
b &= \frac{p}{\sqrt{1 - \varepsilon^2}}
The equation of the orbit is
\end{align}</math>
:<math>r=\frac{p}{1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos\theta}</math>
where (''r'',&nbsp;''θ'') are heliocentrical polar coordinates for the planet (see figure), ''p'' is the '']'', and ''ε'' is the '']''.


The semi-latus rectum ''p'' is the ] between ''r''<sub>min</sub> and ''r''<sub>max</sub>:
For ''θ'' = 0 the planet is at the ''']''' at minimum distance:
:<math>\begin{align}
p &= \left(\frac{r_\max^{-1} + r_\min^{-1}}{2}\right)^{-1} \\
pa &= r_\max r_\min = b^2\,
\end{align}</math>


The eccentricity ''ε'' is the ] between ''r''<sub>min</sub> and ''r''<sub>max</sub>:
:<math>r_\mathrm{min}=\frac{p}{1+\varepsilon}.</math>
:<math>\varepsilon = \frac{r_\max - r_\min}{r_\max + r_\min}.</math>


The ] of the ellipse is
For ''θ'' = 90° the planet is at distance ''p''.
:<math>A = \pi a b\,.</math>


The special case of a circle is ''ε'' = 0, resulting in ''r'' = ''p'' = ''r''<sub>min</sub> = ''r''<sub>max</sub> = ''a'' = ''b'' and ''A'' = ''πr''<sup>2</sup>.
For ''θ'' = 180° the planet is at the ''']''' at maximum distance:


===Second law===
:<math>r_\mathrm{max}=\frac{p}{1-\varepsilon}.</math>
Kepler's second law states that:


<blockquote>A line joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time.<ref name="Wolfram2nd">Bryant, Jeff; Pavlyk, Oleksandr. "", '']''. Retrieved December 27, 2009.</ref></blockquote>
The ] is the ] between ''r''<sub>min</sub> and ''r''<sub>max</sub>:


]
:<math>a= \frac{r_{min}+r_{max}}{2} =\frac{p}{1-\varepsilon^2}.</math>


The orbital radius and angular velocity of the planet in the elliptical orbit will vary. This is shown in the animation: the planet travels faster when closer to the Sun, then slower when farther from the Sun. Kepler's second law states that the blue sector has constant area.
The ] is the ] between ''r''<sub>min</sub> and ''r''<sub>max</sub>:


====History and proofs====
:<math>b=\sqrt{r_{min}r_{max}} =\frac p{\sqrt{1-\varepsilon^2}}.</math>
The ] of the ellipse is
Kepler notably arrived at this law through assumptions that were either only approximately true or outright false and can be outlined as follows:
:<math>A=\pi a b\,.</math>


# Planets are pushed around the Sun by a force from the Sun. This false assumption relies on incorrect ] that an object needs to be pushed to maintain motion.
The special case of a circle is ''ε'' = 0, resulting in ''r'' = ''p'' = ''r''<sub>min</sub> = ''r''<sub>max</sub> = ''a'' = ''b'' and ''A'' = &pi; ''r'' <sup>2</sup>.
# The propelling force from the Sun is inversely proportional to the distance from the Sun. Kepler reasoned this, believing that gravity spreading in three dimensions would be a waste, since the planets inhabited a plane. Thus, an inverse instead of the inverse square law.
# Because Kepler believed that force would be proportional to velocity, it followed from statements #1 and #2 that velocity would be inverse to the distance from the sun. This is also an incorrect tenet of Aristotelian physics.
# Since velocity is inverse to time, the distance from the sun would be proportional to the time to cover a small piece of the orbit. This is approximately true for elliptical orbits.
# The area swept out is proportional to the overall time. This is also approximately true.
# The orbits of a planet are circular (Kepler discovered his Second Law before his First Law, which contradicts this).


Nevertheless, the result of the Second Law is exactly true, as it is logically equivalent to the conservation of angular momentum, which is true for any body experiencing a radially symmetric force.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Holton |first1= Gerald|last2=Brush|first2=Stephen |date=2001 |title=Brush and Holton - Physics: the Human Adventure |location= |publisher=Princeton University Press |pages=42–43 |isbn=978-0813529080}}</ref> A correct proof can be shown through this. Since the cross product of two vectors gives the area of a parallelogram possessing sides of those vectors, the triangular area dA swept out in a short period of time is given by half the cross product of the ''r'' and ''dx'' vectors, for some short piece of the orbit, ''dx''.
===Summary===


<math>dA = \frac{1}{2} (\vec{r} \times \vec{dx})
Using these ellipse-related terms, Kepler's procedure for calculating the heliocentric polar coordinates (''r'',''θ'') to a planetary position as a function of the time ''t'' since ], and the orbital period ''P'', is the following four steps.
= \frac{1}{2} (\vec{r} \times \vec{v} dt)
</math>
for a small piece of the orbit ''dx'' and time to cover it ''dt''.


Thus <math>\frac{dA}{dt} = \frac{1}{2} (\vec{r} \times \vec{v}).</math>
:1. Compute the '''mean anomaly''' ''M'' from the formula
::<math>M=\frac{2\pi t}{P}</math>
:2. Compute the ''']''' ''E'' by numerically solving '''Kepler's equation''':
::<math>\ M=E-\varepsilon\cdot\sin E</math>
:3. Compute the ''']''' ''&theta;'' by the equation:
::<math>\tan\frac \theta 2 = \sqrt{\frac{1+\varepsilon}{1-\varepsilon}}\cdot\tan\frac E 2</math>
:4. Compute the '''heliocentric distance''' ''r'' from the first law:
::<math>r=\frac p {1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos\theta}</math>


<math>\frac{dA}{dt} = \frac{1}{m} \frac{1}{2} (\vec{r} \times \vec{p}).</math>
The important special case of circular orbit, ε = 0, gives simply <math>\theta</math> = ''E'' = ''M''.


Since the final expression is proportional to the total angular momentum <math>(\vec{r} \times \vec{p})</math>, Kepler's equal area law will hold for any system that conserves angular momentum. Since any radial force will produce no torque on the planet's motion, angular momentum will be conserved.
The proof of this procedure is shown below.


====In terms of elliptical parameters====
===Details and proof===
]
The Keplerian problem assumes an ] and the four points:
:''s'' the sun (at one focus of ellipse);
:''z'' the perihelion
:''c'' the center of the ellipse
:''p'' the planet
and
:<math>\ a=|cz|,</math> distance between center and perihelion, the '''semimajor axis''',
:<math>\ \varepsilon={|cs|\over a},</math> the '''eccentricity''',
:<math>\ b=a\sqrt{1-\varepsilon^2},</math> the '''semiminor axis''',
:<math>\ r=|sp| ,</math> the distance between sun and planet.
:<math>\theta=\angle zsp,</math> the direction to the planet as seen from the sun, the ''']'''.


In a small time <math>dt</math> the planet sweeps out a small triangle having base line <math>r</math> and height <math>r \, d\theta</math> and area <math display="inline">dA = \frac{1}{2} \cdot r \cdot r \, d\theta</math>, so the constant ] is <math display="block">\frac{dA}{dt} = \frac{r^2}{2} \frac{d\theta}{dt}.</math>
The problem is to compute the ] (''r'',''θ'') of the planet from the '''time since perihelion''', ''t''.


The area enclosed by the elliptical orbit is <math>\pi ab</math>. So the period <math>T</math> satisfies
It is solved in steps. Kepler considered the circle with the major axis as a diameter, and
:<math>T \cdot \frac{r^2}{2} \frac{d\theta}{dt} = \pi ab</math>
:<math>\ x,</math> the projection of the planet to the auxiliary circle
:<math>\ y,</math> the point on the circle such that the sector areas ''|zcy|'' and ''|zsx|'' are equal,
:<math>M=\angle zcy,</math> the ''']'''.


and the ] of the planet around the Sun
The sector areas are related by <math>|zsp|=\frac b a \cdot|zsx|.</math>
:<math>n = \frac{2\pi}{T}</math>


satisfies
The ] area <math>\ |zcy| = \frac{a^2 M}2.</math>
:<math>r^2\,d\theta = abn\,dt.</math>


And so, <math display="block">\frac{dA}{dt} = \frac{a b n}{2} = \frac{\pi a b}{T}.</math>
The area swept since perihelion,
:<math>|zsp|=\frac b a \cdot|zsx|=\frac b a \cdot|zcy|=\frac b a\cdot\frac{a^2 M}2 </math>&ensp;<math>= \frac {a b M}{2} </math> ,
is by Kepler's second law proportional to time since perihelion. So the mean anomaly, ''M'', is proportional to time since perihelion, ''t''.
:<math>M={2 \pi t \over P},</math>
where ''P'' is the ].


{| class="wikitable" style=width:500px
The mean anomaly ''M'' is first computed. The goal is to compute the true anomaly ''θ''. The function ''θ''=''f''(''M'') is, however, not elementary. Kepler's solution is to use
|+ Orbits of planets with varying eccentricities.
:<math>E=\angle zcx</math>, ''x'' as seen from the centre, the ''']'''
|-
as an intermediate variable, and first compute ''E'' as a function of ''M'' by solving Kepler's equation below, and then compute the true anomaly ''θ'' from the eccentric anomaly ''E''. Here are the details.
! Low !! High
:<math>\ |zcy|=|zsx|=|zcx|-|scx|</math>
|-
| ] Planet orbiting the Sun in a circular orbit (e=0.0)
|| ] Planet orbiting the Sun in an orbit with e=0.5
|-
| ] Planet orbiting the Sun in an orbit with e=0.2
| ] Planet orbiting the Sun in an orbit with e=0.8
|-
| colspan=2 | The red ray rotates at a constant angular velocity and with the same orbital time period as the planet, <math>T=1</math>.
S: Sun at the primary focus,
C: Centre of ellipse,
S': The secondary focus.
In each case, the area of all sectors depicted is identical.
|}


===Third law===
:<math>\frac{a^2 M}2=\frac{a^2 E}2-\frac {a\varepsilon\cdot a\sin E}2</math>
Kepler's third law states that:
Division by ''a''<sup>2</sup>/2 gives '''Kepler's equation'''
:<math>M=E-\varepsilon\cdot\sin E.</math>
The catch is that Kepler's equation cannot be rearranged to isolate ''E''. The function ''E'' = ''f''(''M'') is not an elementary formula, but Kepler's equation is solved either iteratively by a ] or, as derived in the article on ], by an ].


<!--The article Gravitation links here. Please do not change the title of this subsection without creating an appropriate anchor.-->
Having computed the eccentric anomaly ''E'' from Kepler's equation, the next step is to calculate the true anomaly ''θ'' from the eccentric anomaly ''E''.
<blockquote>The ratio of the square of an object's ] with the cube of the semi-major axis of its orbit is the same for all objects orbiting the same primary.</blockquote>


This captures the relationship between the distance of planets from the Sun, and their orbital periods.
Note from the figure that
:<math> \overrightarrow{cd}=\overrightarrow{cs}+\overrightarrow{sd}</math>
so that
:<math>a\cdot\cos E=a\cdot\varepsilon+r\cdot\cos \theta.</math>
Dividing by <math>a</math> and inserting from Kepler's first law
:<math>\ \frac r a =\frac{1-\varepsilon^2}{1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos \theta} </math>
to get
:<math>\cos E
=\varepsilon+\frac{1-\varepsilon^2}{1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos \theta}\cdot\cos \theta
</math>&ensp;<math>=\frac{\varepsilon\cdot(1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos \theta)+(1-\varepsilon^2)\cdot\cos \theta}{1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos \theta}
</math>&ensp;<math>=\frac{\varepsilon +\cos \theta}{1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos \theta}.</math>
The result is a usable relationship between the eccentric anomaly ''E'' and the true anomaly ''θ''.


Kepler enunciated in 1619<ref name = "Kepler 1619"/> this third law in a laborious attempt to determine what he viewed as the "]" according to precise laws, and express it in terms of musical notation.<ref>]. ''The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Physical Science''. p. 52.</ref> It was therefore known as the ''harmonic law''.<ref name=Holton3>{{cite book |title=Physics, the Human Adventure |author=Gerald James Holton, Stephen G. Brush |page=45 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=czaGZzR0XOUC&pg=PA45|isbn=978-0-8135-2908-0 |publisher=Rutgers University Press |date=2001}}</ref> The original form of this law (referring to not the semi-major axis, but rather a "mean distance") holds true only for planets with small eccentricities near zero.<ref>{{cite journal | pmc=6395789 | date=2019 | last1=Vijaya | first1=G. K. | title=Original form of Kepler's Third Law and its misapplication in Propositions XXXII-XXXVII in Newton's Principia (Book I) | journal=Heliyon | volume=5 | issue=2 | pages=e01274 | doi=10.1016/j.heliyon.2019.e01274 | doi-access=free | pmid=30886926 | bibcode=2019Heliy...501274V }}</ref>
A computationally more convenient form follows by substituting into the ]:
:<math>\tan^2\frac{x}{2}=\frac{1-\cos x}{1+\cos x}.</math>
Get
:<math>\tan^2\frac{E}{2}
=\frac{1-\cos E}{1+\cos E}
</math>&ensp;<math>=\frac{1-\frac{\varepsilon+\cos \theta}{1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos \theta}}{1+\frac{\varepsilon+\cos \theta}{1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos \theta}}
</math>&ensp;<math>=\frac{(1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos \theta)-(\varepsilon+\cos \theta)}{(1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos \theta)+(\varepsilon+\cos \theta)}
</math>&ensp;<math>=\frac{1-\varepsilon}{1+\varepsilon}\cdot\frac{1-\cos \theta}{1+\cos \theta}=\frac{1-\varepsilon}{1+\varepsilon}\cdot\tan^2\frac{\theta}{2}.</math>
Multiplying by (1+ε)/(1&minus;ε) and taking the square root gives the result
:<math>\tan\frac \theta2=\sqrt\frac{1+\varepsilon}{1-\varepsilon}\cdot\tan\frac E2.</math>


Using Newton's law of gravitation (published 1687), this relation can be found in the case of a circular orbit by setting the ] equal to the gravitational force:
We have now completed the third step in the connection between time and position in the orbit.
: <math>mr\omega^2 = G\frac{mM}{r^2}</math>


Then, expressing the angular velocity ω in terms of the orbital period <math>{T}</math> and then rearranging, results in Kepler's Third Law:
One could even develop a series computing ''θ'' directly from ''M''.
: <math>mr\left(\frac{2\pi}{T}\right)^2 = G\frac{mM}{r^2} \implies T^2 = \left(\frac{4\pi^2}{GM} \right)r^3 \implies T^2 \propto r^3</math>


A more detailed derivation can be done with general elliptical orbits, instead of circles, as well as orbiting the center of mass, instead of just the large mass. This results in replacing a circular radius, <math>r</math>, with the semi-major axis, <math>a</math>, of the elliptical relative motion of one mass relative to the other, as well as replacing the large mass <math>M</math> with <math>M + m</math>. However, with planet masses being so much smaller than the Sun, this correction is often ignored. The full corresponding formula is:
The fourth step is to compute the heliocentric distance ''r'' from the true anomaly ''θ'' by Kepler's first law:
:<math>\frac{a^3}{T^2} = \frac{G(M + m)}{4\pi^2} \approx \frac{GM}{4\pi^2} \approx 7.496 \times 10^{-6} \frac{\text{AU}^3}{\text{days}^2} \text{ is constant}</math>
:<math>\ r=a\cdot\frac{1-\varepsilon^2}{1+\varepsilon\cdot\cos \theta}.</math>


where <math>M</math> is the ], <math>m</math> is the mass of the planet, <math>G</math> is the ], <math>T</math> is the orbital period and <math>a</math> is the elliptical semi-major axis, and <math>\text{AU} </math> is the ], the average distance from earth to the sun.
==Derivation from Newton's laws of motion and Newton's law of gravitation ==
Kepler's laws are concerned with the motion of the planets around the sun. ] in general are concerned with the motion of objects subject to impressed forces. ] describes how masses attract each other through the force of ]. Using the law of gravitation to determine the impressed forces in Newton's laws of motion enables the calculation of planetary orbits, as discussed below.


==== Table ====
In the special case where there are only two particles, the motion of the bodies is the exactly soluble ], of which an approximate example is the motion of a planet around the Sun according to Kepler's laws, as shown below. The trajectory of the lighter particle may also be a ] or a ] or a ].
The following table shows the data used by Kepler to empirically derive his law:
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Data used by Kepler (1618)
! Planet
! Mean distance <br />to sun (AU)
! Period <br />(days)
! <math display="inline">\frac{R^3}{T^2}</math>{{nbsp}}(10{{sup|-6}}{{nbsp}}AU{{sup|3}}/day{{sup|2}})
|-
|Mercury
|0.389
|87.77
|7.64
|-
|Venus
|0.724
|224.70
|7.52
|-
|Earth
|1
|365.25
|7.50
|-
|Mars
|1.524
|686.95
|7.50
|-
|Jupiter
|5.20
|4332.62
|7.49
|-
|Saturn
|9.510
|10759.2
|7.43
|}


Kepler became aware of ]'s recent invention of logarithms and log-log graphs before he discovered the pattern.<ref>{{Cite book| title=Kepler| url=https://archive.org/details/kepler00casp| url-access=registration| last=Caspar|first=Max| page=304| publisher=Dover| year=1993| location=New York| isbn=9780486676050}}</ref>
In the case of a single planet orbiting its sun, Newton's laws imply elliptical motion. The focus of the ellipse is at the center of mass of the sun and the planet (the ]), rather than located at the center of the sun itself. The period of the orbit depends a little on the mass of the planet. In the realistic case of many planets, the interaction from other planets modifies the orbit of any one planet. Even in this more complex situation, the language of Kepler's laws applies as the complicated orbits are described as simple Kepler orbits with slowly varying ]. See also ].


Upon finding this pattern Kepler wrote:<ref>{{Cite book| title=Kepler| url=https://archive.org/details/kepler00casp| url-access=registration| last=Caspar|first=Max| page=286| publisher=Dover| year=1993| location=New York| isbn=9780486676050}}</ref>
While Kepler's laws are expressed either in geometrical language, or as equations connecting the coordinates of the planet and the time variable with the ], Newton's second law is a ]. So the derivations below involve the art of solving differential equations. Kepler's second law is derived first, as the derivation of the first law depends on the derivation of the second law. The derivations that follow use ] ]s, that is, polar coordinates with the sun as the origin. See ]. However, they can alternatively be formulated and derived using ].<ref name=Cartesian>Hyman, Andrew. , ''European Journal of Physics'', Vol. 14, pp. 145&ndash;147 (1993).</ref>


{{Blockquote|I first believed I was dreaming... But it is absolutely certain and exact that the ratio which exists between the period times of any two planets is precisely the ratio of the 3/2th power of the mean distance.
===Equations of motion===
| source = translated from ''Harmonies of the World'' by Kepler (1619)}}
{{seealso|Mechanics of planar particle motion#Polar coordinates in an inertial frame of reference|Centrifugal_force (rotating reference frame)#Planetary motion}}
Assume that the planet is so much lighter than the sun that the acceleration of the sun can be neglected. In other words, the barycenter is approximated as the center of the sun. Introduce the ] system in the plane of the orbit, with radial coordinate from the sun's center, ''r'' and angle from some arbitrary starting direction ''θ''.


{{solar_system_orbital_period_vs_semimajor_axis.svg|280px}}
Newton's law of gravitation says that "every object in the universe attracts every other object along a line of the centers of the objects, proportional to each object's mass, and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between the objects," and his second law of motion says that "the mass times the acceleration is equal to the force." So the mass of the planet times the acceleration vector of the planet equals the mass of the sun times the mass of the planet, divided by the square of the distance, times minus the radial ] <math>\hat{\mathbf{r}}</math>, times a constant of proportionality. This is written:


For comparison, here are modern estimates:{{citation needed|date=March 2024}}
:<math> m\cdot\ddot\mathbf{r} = \frac{M\cdot m}{r^2}\cdot(-\hat{\mathbf{r}})\cdot G</math>
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Modern data
! Planet
! Semi-major axis (AU)
! Period (days)
! <math display="inline">\frac{a^3}{T^2}</math>{{nbsp}}(10{{sup|-6}}{{nbsp}}AU{{sup|3}}/day{{sup|2}})
|-
|Mercury
|0.38710
|87.9693
|7.496
|-
|Venus
|0.72333
|224.7008
|7.496
|-
|Earth
|1
|365.2564
|7.496
|-
|Mars
|1.52366
|686.9796
|7.495
|-
|Jupiter
|5.20336
|4332.8201
|7.504
|-
|Saturn
|9.53707
|10775.599
|7.498
|-
|Uranus
|19.1913
|30687.153
|7.506
|-
|Neptune
|30.0690
|60190.03
|7.504
|}


==Planetary acceleration==
where a dot on top of the variable signifies differentiation with respect to time, and the second dot indicates the second derivative.
] computed in his '']'' the ] of a planet moving according to Kepler's first and second laws.
# The ''direction'' of the acceleration is towards the Sun.
# The ''magnitude'' of the acceleration is inversely proportional to the square of the planet's distance from the Sun (the ''inverse square law'').


This implies that the Sun may be the physical cause of the acceleration of planets. However, Newton states in his ''Principia'' that he considers forces from a mathematical point of view, not a physical, thereby taking an instrumentalist view.<ref>I. Newton, ''Principia'', p. 408 in the translation of I.B. Cohen and A. Whitman</ref> Moreover, he does not assign a cause to gravity.<ref>I. Newton, ''Principia'', p. 943 in the translation of I.B. Cohen and A. Whitman</ref>
:<math> \dot\hat{\mathbf{r}} = \dot\theta \hat{\boldsymbol\theta}</math>
where <math> \hat{\boldsymbol\theta}</math> is the tangential (azimuthal) unit vector orthogonal to <math>\hat{\mathbf{r}}</math> and pointing in the direction of rotation, and


Newton defined the ] acting on a planet to be the product of its ] and the acceleration (see ]). So:
:<math> \dot\hat{\boldsymbol\theta} = -\dot\theta \hat{\mathbf{r}}.</math>
# Every planet is attracted towards the Sun.
# The force acting on a planet is directly proportional to the mass of the planet and is inversely proportional to the square of its distance from the Sun.


The Sun plays an unsymmetrical part, which is unjustified. So he assumed, in ]:
So the position vector
# All bodies in the Solar System attract one another.
:<math>\mathbf{r} = r \hat{\mathbf{r}}</math>
# The force between two bodies is in direct proportion to the product of their masses and in inverse proportion to the square of the distance between them.
is differentiated twice to give the velocity vector and the acceleration vector
:<math>\dot\mathbf{r} =\dot r \hat\mathbf{r} + r \dot\hat\mathbf{r}
=\dot r \hat{\mathbf{r}} + r \dot\theta \hat{\boldsymbol\theta},</math>
:<math>\ddot\mathbf{r}
= (\ddot r \hat{\mathbf{r}} +\dot r \dot\hat{\mathbf{r}} )
+ (\dot r\dot\theta \hat{\boldsymbol\theta} + r\ddot\theta \hat{\boldsymbol\theta}
+ r\dot\theta \dot\hat{\boldsymbol\theta})
= (\ddot r - r\dot\theta^2) \hat{\mathbf{r}} + (r\ddot\theta + 2\dot r \dot\theta) \hat{\boldsymbol\theta}.</math>


As the planets have small masses compared to that of the Sun, the orbits conform approximately to Kepler's laws. Newton's model improves upon Kepler's model, and fits actual observations more accurately. (See ].)
Note that for constant distance, <math>\ r</math>, the planet is subject to the ], <math>r\dot\theta^2</math>, and for constant angular speed, <math>\dot\theta</math>, the planet is subject to the ], <math>2\dot r \dot\theta</math>.<ref name=Coriolis>Although this term is called the "Coriolis acceleration", or the "Coriolis force per unit mass", it should be noted that the term "Coriolis force" as used in meteorology, for example, refers to something different: namely the force, similar in mathematical form, but caused by rotation of a frame of reference. Of course, in the example here of planetary motion, the entire analysis takes place in a stationary, ], so there is no force present related to rotation of a frame of reference.</ref>


Below comes the detailed calculation of the acceleration of a planet moving according to Kepler's first and second laws.
Inserting the acceleration vector into Newton's laws, and dividing by ''m'', gives the vector ]
:<math> (\ddot r - r\dot\theta^2) \hat{\mathbf{r}} + (r\ddot\theta + 2\dot r \dot\theta) \hat{\boldsymbol\theta}= -GMr^{-2}\hat{\mathbf{r}}</math>


===Acceleration vector===
Equating components, we get the two ]s of motion, one for the acceleration in the <math> \hat{\mathbf r}</math> direction, the ''radial'' acceleration
{{See also|Polar coordinate#Vector calculus}}
:<math>\ddot r - r\dot\theta^2 = -GMr^{-2},</math>
From the ] point of view consider the vector to the planet <math>\mathbf{r} = r\hat{\mathbf{r}} </math> where <math> r</math> is the distance to the planet and <math>\hat{\mathbf{r}}</math> is a ] pointing towards the planet.
and one for the acceleration in the <math> \hat{\boldsymbol\theta}</math> direction, the ''tangential'' or ''azimuthal'' acceleration:
<math display="block">
:<math>r\ddot\theta + 2\dot r\dot\theta = 0.</math>
\frac{d\hat{\mathbf{r}}}{dt} = \dot{\hat{\mathbf{r}}} = \dot{\theta}\hat{\boldsymbol\theta},\qquad
\frac{d\hat{\boldsymbol\theta}}{dt} = \dot{\hat{\boldsymbol\theta}} = -\dot{\theta}\hat{\mathbf{r}}</math>


where <math>\hat{\boldsymbol\theta}</math> is the unit vector whose direction is 90 degrees counterclockwise of <math>\hat{\mathbf{r}}</math>, and <math>\theta</math> is the polar angle, and where a ] on top of the variable signifies differentiation with respect to time.
===Deriving Kepler's second law===
In order to derive Kepler's second law only the tangential acceleration equation is needed.


Differentiate the position vector twice to obtain the velocity vector and the acceleration vector:
The magnitude of the ]
<math display="block">\begin{align}
:<math>\ell = r^2 \dot \theta </math>
\dot{\mathbf{r}} &= \dot{r}\hat{\mathbf{r}} + r\dot{\hat{\mathbf{r}}}
is a ], even if both the distance <math>\ r</math>, and the ] <math>\dot\theta</math>, and the tangential velocity <math> r \dot \theta </math>, vary,
= \dot{r}\hat{\mathbf{r}} + r\dot{\theta}\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}}, \\
because
\ddot{\mathbf{r}} &= \left(\ddot{r}\hat{\mathbf{r}}
:<math>\frac{d\ell}{dt} =\frac{d(r^2 \dot \theta)}{dt} = r^2 \ddot \theta+2r \dot r\dot \theta=r(r \ddot \theta+2\dot r \theta)=0 </math>
+ \dot{r}\dot{\hat{\mathbf{r}}}
where the expression in the last parentheses vanishes due to the tangential acceleration equation.
\right)
+ \left(\dot{r}\dot{\theta} \hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}}
+ r\ddot{\theta}\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}}
+ r\dot{\theta}\dot{\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}}}
\right)
= \left(\ddot{r} - r\dot{\theta}^2\right)\hat{\mathbf{r}}
+ \left(r\ddot{\theta} + 2\dot{r}\dot{\theta}\right)\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}}.
\end{align}</math>


So
The area swept out from time ''t''<sub>1</sub> to time ''t''<sub>2</sub>,
<math display="block">\ddot{\mathbf{r}} = a_r \hat{\boldsymbol{r}}+a_\theta\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}}</math>
:<math>\ \int_{t_1}^{t_2}\frac 1 2 \cdot base\cdot d(height) = \int_{t_1}^{t_2}\frac 1 2 \cdot r\cdot r\dot \theta dt=\frac 1 2 \cdot\ell \cdot(t_2-t_1) </math>
where the '''radial acceleration''' is
depends only on the duration ''t''<sub>2</sub>&minus;''t''<sub>1</sub>. This is Kepler's second law.
<math display="block">a_r = \ddot{r} - r\dot{\theta}^2</math>
and the '''transversal acceleration''' is
<math display="block">a_\theta = r\ddot{\theta} + 2\dot{r}\dot{\theta}.</math>


===Deriving Kepler's first law=== ===Inverse square law===
Kepler's second law says that <math display="block">r^2\dot{\theta} = nab</math> is constant.


The transversal acceleration <math>a_\theta</math> is zero:
In order to derive Kepler's first law define
<math display="block">\frac{d\left(r^2\dot{\theta}\right)}{dt}
= r\left(2\dot{r}\dot{\theta} + r{\ddot{\theta}}\right)
= ra_\theta = 0.
</math>


So the acceleration of a planet obeying Kepler's second law is directed towards the Sun.
:<math>\ u =pr^{-1}\,</math>


The radial acceleration <math>a_\text{r}</math> is
where the constant
<math display="block">a_\text{r}
= \ddot{r} - r\dot{\theta}^2
= \ddot{r} - r\left(\frac{nab}{r^2}\right)^2
= \ddot{r} - \frac{n^2 a^2 b^2}{r^3}.
</math>


Kepler's first law states that the orbit is described by the equation:
:<math>p=\ell ^2 G^{-1}M^{-1}\,</math>
<math display="block">\frac{p}{r} = 1 + \varepsilon\cos(\theta).</math>


Differentiating with respect to time
has the dimension of length. Then
<math display="block">-\frac{p\dot{r}}{r^2} = -\varepsilon\sin(\theta)\,\dot{\theta}</math>
or <math display="block">p\dot{r} = nab\,\varepsilon\sin(\theta).</math>


Differentiating once more
:<math>GMr^{-2}=\ell^2 p^{-3}u^{2} </math>
<math display="block">p\ddot{r}
= nab\varepsilon\cos(\theta)\, \dot{\theta}
= nab\varepsilon\cos(\theta)\, \frac{nab}{r^2}
= \frac{n^2 a^2 b^2}{r^2}\varepsilon\cos(\theta).
</math>


The radial acceleration <math>a_\text{r}</math> satisfies
and
<math display="block">pa_\text{r}
= \frac{n^2 a^2 b^2}{r^2}\varepsilon\cos(\theta) - p\frac{n^2 a^2 b^2}{r^3}
= \frac{n^2 a^2 b^2}{r^2}\left(\varepsilon\cos(\theta) - \frac{p}{r}\right).
</math>


Substituting the equation of the ellipse gives
:<math>\ \dot \theta =\ell r^{-2}=\ell p^{-2}u^2. </math>
<math display="block">pa_\text{r} = \frac{n^2 a^2 b^2}{r^2}\left(\frac{p}{r} - 1 - \frac{p}{r}\right) = -\frac{n^2 a^2}{r^2}b^2.</math>


The relation <math>b^2 = pa</math> gives the simple final result
Differentiation with respect to time is transformed into differentiation with respect to angle:
<math display="block">a_\text{r} = -\frac{n^2 a^3}{r^2}.</math>


This means that the acceleration vector <math>\mathbf{\ddot{r}}</math> of any planet obeying Kepler's first and second law satisfies the ''']'''
:<math>\ \dot X=\frac {dX}{dt}=\frac {dX}{d\theta}\cdot\frac {d\theta}{dt}=\frac {dX}{d \theta}\cdot \dot\theta=\frac {dX}{d \theta}\cdot\ell p^{-2}u^2. </math>
<math display="block">\mathbf{\ddot{r}} = -\frac{\alpha}{r^2}\hat{\mathbf{r}}</math>
where
<math display="block">\alpha = n^2 a^3</math>
is a constant, and <math>\hat{\mathbf{r}}</math> is the unit vector pointing from the Sun towards the planet, and <math>r\,</math> is the distance between the planet and the Sun.


Since mean motion <math>n=\frac{2\pi}{T}</math> where <math>T</math> is the period, according to Kepler's third law, <math>\alpha</math> has the same value for all the planets. So the inverse square law for planetary accelerations applies throughout the entire Solar System.
Differentiate


The inverse square law is a ]. The solutions to this differential equation include the Keplerian motions, as shown, but they also include motions where the orbit is a ] or ] or a ]. (See ].)
:<math>\ r =pu^{-1}</math>


===Newton's law of gravitation===
twice:
By ], the gravitational force that acts on the planet is:
<math display="block">\mathbf{F} = m_\text{planet} \mathbf{\ddot{r}} = - m_\text{planet} \alpha r^{-2} \hat{\mathbf{r}}</math>


where <math>m_\text{planet}</math> is the mass of the planet and <math>\alpha</math> has the same value for all planets in the Solar System. According to ], the Sun is attracted to the planet by a force of the same magnitude. Since the force is proportional to the mass of the planet, under the symmetric consideration, it should also be proportional to the mass of the Sun, <math>m_\text{Sun}</math>. So
:<math>\dot r = \frac{d(pu^{-1})}{d\theta}\cdot\ell p^{-2}u^{2} = -pu^{-2}\frac{du}{d\theta}\cdot\ell p^{-2}u^{2}= -\ell p^{-1}\frac{du}{d\theta}</math>
<math display="block">\alpha = Gm_\text{Sun}</math>
where <math>G</math> is the ].


The acceleration of Solar System body number ''i'' is, according to Newton's laws:
:<math>\ddot r = \frac{d\dot r}{d\theta}\cdot\ell p^{-2}u^{2}
<math display="block">\mathbf{\ddot{r}}_i = G\sum_{j \ne i} m_j r_{ij}^{-2} \hat{\mathbf{r}}_{ij} </math>
= \frac{d}{d\theta}\left(-\ell p^{-1} \frac{du}{d\theta}\right)\cdot\ell p^{-2}u^{2}
where <math>m_j </math> is the mass of body ''j'', <math>r_{ij} </math> is the distance between body ''i'' and body ''j'', <math>\hat{\mathbf{r}}_{ij} </math> is the unit vector from body ''i'' towards body ''j'', and the vector summation is over all bodies in the Solar System, besides ''i'' itself.
= -\ell^2 p^{-3}u^{2}\frac{d^2 u}{d\theta^2}</math>


In the special case where there are only two bodies in the Solar System, Earth and Sun, the acceleration becomes
Substitute into the radial equation of motion
<math display="block">\mathbf{\ddot{r}}_\text{Earth} = Gm_\text{Sun} r_{\text{Earth},\text{Sun}}^{-2} \hat{\mathbf{r}}_{\text{Earth},\text{Sun}}</math>
which is the acceleration of the Kepler motion. So this Earth moves around the Sun according to Kepler's laws.


If the two bodies in the Solar System are Moon and Earth the acceleration of the Moon becomes
:<math>\ddot r - r\dot\theta^2 = -GMr^{-2}</math>
<math display="block">\mathbf{\ddot{r}}_\text{Moon} = Gm_\text{Earth} r_{\text{Moon},\text{Earth}}^{-2} \hat{\mathbf{r}}_{\text{Moon},\text{Earth}}</math>


So in this approximation, the Moon moves around the Earth according to Kepler's laws.
and get


In the three-body case the accelerations are
:<math>\left(-\ell^2 p^{-3}u^2\frac{d^2u}{d\theta^2}\right) - (pu^{-1})(\ell p^{-2}u^2)^2 = -\ell ^2 p^{-3} u^2</math>
<math display="block">\begin{align}
\mathbf{\ddot{r}}_\text{Sun} &=
Gm_\text{Earth} r_{\text{Sun},\text{Earth}}^{-2} \hat{\mathbf{r}}_{\text{Sun},\text{Earth}} +
Gm_\text{Moon} r_{\text{Sun},\text{Moon}}^{-2} \hat{\mathbf{r}}_{\text{Sun},\text{Moon}} \\
\mathbf{\ddot{r}}_\text{Earth} &=
Gm_\text{Sun} r_{\text{Earth},\text{Sun}}^{-2} \hat{\mathbf{r}}_{\text{Earth},\text{Sun}} +
Gm_\text{Moon} r_{\text{Earth},\text{Moon}}^{-2} \hat{\mathbf{r}}_{\text{Earth},\text{Moon}} \\
\mathbf{\ddot{r}}_\text{Moon} &=
Gm_\text{Sun} r_{\text{Moon},\text{Sun}}^{-2} \hat{\mathbf{r}}_{\text{Moon},\text{Sun}} +
Gm_\text{Earth} r_{\text{Moon},\text{Earth}}^{-2} \hat{\mathbf{r}}_{\text{Moon},\text{Earth}}
\end{align}</math>


These accelerations are not those of Kepler orbits, and the ] is complicated. But Keplerian approximation is the basis for ] calculations. (See ].)
Divide by <math>-\ell^2 p^{-3}u^2</math> to get a simple ] for the orbit of the planet:


==Position as a function of time{{anchor|position_function_time}}==
:<math>\frac{d^2u}{d\theta^2} + u = 1 . </math>
Kepler used his two first laws to compute the position of a planet as a function of time. His method involves the solution of a ] called ].


The procedure for calculating the heliocentric polar coordinates (''r'',''θ'') of a planet as a function of the time ''t'' since ], is the following five steps:
An obvious solution to this equation is the circular orbit


# Compute the ] {{math|1=''n'' = (2''π'' rad)/''P''}}, where ''P'' is the period.
:<math>\ u = 1.</math>
# Compute the ] {{math|1=''M'' = ''nt''}}, where ''t'' is the time since perihelion.
# Compute the ] ''E'' by solving Kepler's equation: <math display="block">M = E - \varepsilon\sin E ,</math> where <math>\varepsilon</math> is the eccentricity.
# Compute the ] ''θ'' by solving the equation: <math display="block">(1 - \varepsilon) \tan^2 \frac{\theta}{2} = (1 + \varepsilon)\tan^2\frac{E}{2}</math>
# Compute the heliocentric distance ''r'': <math display="block">r = a(1 - \varepsilon\cos E) ,</math> where <math>a</math> is the semimajor axis.
The position polar coordinates (''r'',''θ'') can now be written as a Cartesian vector <math>\mathbf{p} = r \left\langle \cos{\theta}, \sin{\theta}\right\rangle</math> and the Cartesian velocity vector can then be calculated as <math>\mathbf{v} = \frac{\sqrt{\mu a}}{r} \left\langle -\sin{E}, \sqrt{1-\varepsilon^2} \cos{E}\right\rangle</math>, where <math>\mu</math> is the ].<ref>{{cite web|last1=Schwarz|first1=René|title=Memorandum № 1: Keplerian Orbit Elements → Cartesian State Vectors |url=https://downloads.rene-schwarz.com/download/M001-Keplerian_Orbit_Elements_to_Cartesian_State_Vectors.pdf|access-date=4 May 2018}}</ref>


The important special case of circular orbit, ''ε''&nbsp;=&nbsp;0, gives {{nowrap|1=''θ'' = ''E'' = ''M''}}. Because the uniform circular motion was considered to be ''normal'', a deviation from this motion was considered an anomaly.
Other solutions are obtained by adding solutions to the ]


The proof of this procedure is shown below.
:<math>\frac{d^2u}{d\theta^2} + u = 0</math>


===Mean anomaly, ''M''===
These solutions are
{{Main|Mean anomaly}}
]
The Keplerian problem assumes an ] and the four points:
* ''s'' the Sun (at one focus of ellipse);
* ''z'' the ]
* ''c'' the center of the ellipse
* ''p'' the planet
and
* <math>a = |cz|,</math> distance between center and perihelion, the semimajor axis,
* <math>\varepsilon = {|cs| \over a},</math> the eccentricity,
* <math>b = a\sqrt{1 - \varepsilon^2},</math> the semiminor axis,
* <math>r = |sp| ,</math> the distance between Sun and planet.
* <math>\theta = \angle zsp,</math> the direction to the planet as seen from the Sun, the ].


The problem is to compute the ] (''r'',''θ'') of the planet from the time since perihelion,&nbsp;''t''.
:<math>\ u = \varepsilon\cdot\cos(\theta-\theta_0) </math>


It is solved in steps. Kepler considered the circle with the major axis as a diameter, and
where <math>\ \varepsilon </math> and <math>\theta_0\,</math> are arbitrary constants of integration. So the result is
*<math>x,</math> the projection of the planet to the auxiliary circle
*<math>y,</math> the point on the circle such that the sector areas |''zcy''| and |''zsx''| are equal,
*<math>M = \angle zcy,</math> the ].


:<math>\ u = 1+ \varepsilon\cdot\cos(\theta-\theta_0) </math> The sector areas are related by <math>|zsp| = \frac{b}{a} \cdot |zsx|.</math>


The ] area <math>|zcy| = \frac{a^2 M}2.</math>
Choosing the axis of the ] such that <math>\ \theta_0=0</math>, and inserting <math>\ u=pr^{-1}</math>, gives:


The area swept since perihelion,
:<math>\ pr^{-1 } = 1+ \varepsilon\cdot\cos\theta . </math>
<math display="block">|zsp| = \frac{b}{a} \cdot|zsx| = \frac{b}{a} \cdot |zcy| = \frac{b}{a} \cdot \frac{a^2 M}{2} = \frac{abM}{2},</math>
is by Kepler's second law proportional to time since perihelion. So the mean anomaly, ''M'', is proportional to time since perihelion, ''t''.
<math display="block">M = nt,</math>
where ''n'' is the ].


===Eccentric anomaly, ''E''===
If <math>\ \varepsilon<1 , </math> this is Kepler's first law.
When the mean anomaly ''M'' is computed, the goal is to compute the true anomaly ''θ''. The function ''θ''&nbsp;=&nbsp;''f''(''M'') is, however, not elementary.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://info.ifpan.edu.pl/firststep/aw-works/fsII/mul/mueller.html| title=Equation of Time – Problem in Astronomy| last=Müller| first=M| date=1995| publisher=Acta Physica Polonica A | access-date=23 February 2013}}</ref> Kepler's solution is to use
<math display="block">E = \angle zcx,</math> ''x'' as seen from the centre, the ]
as an intermediate variable, and first compute ''E'' as a function of ''M'' by solving Kepler's equation below, and then compute the true anomaly ''θ'' from the eccentric anomaly ''E''. Here are the details.
<math display="block">\begin{align}
|zcy| &= |zsx| = |zcx| - |scx| \\
with |scx| &= \frac{|cs| . |dx|}{2} \\
\frac{a^2 M}{2} &= \frac{a^2 E}2 - \frac{a\varepsilon \cdot a\sin E}{2}
\end{align}
</math>


Division by ''a''<sup>2</sup>/2 gives ]
===Deriving Kepler's third law===
<math display="block">M = E - \varepsilon\sin E.</math>
In the special case of ''circular'' orbits, which are ellipses with zero eccentricity, the relation between the radius ''a'' of the orbit and its period ''P'' can be derived relatively easily. The ] of circular motion is proportional to ''a''/''P''<sup>2</sup>, and it is provided by the gravitational force, which is proportional to 1/''a''<sup>2</sup>. Hence,


This equation gives ''M'' as a function of ''E''. Determining ''E'' for a given ''M'' is the inverse problem. Iterative numerical algorithms are commonly used.
:<math>P^2 \propto a^3</math>


Having computed the eccentric anomaly ''E'', the next step is to calculate the true anomaly&nbsp;''θ''.
which is Kepler's third law for the special case.


But note: Cartesian position coordinates with reference to the center of ellipse are (''a''&nbsp;cos&nbsp;''E'',&nbsp;''b''&nbsp;sin&nbsp;''E'')
In the general case of ''elliptical'' orbits, the derivation is more complicated.


With reference to the Sun (with coordinates (''c'',0) = (''ae'',0) ), ''r'' = (''a''&nbsp;cos&nbsp;''E'' – ''ae'', ''b''&nbsp;sin&nbsp;''E'')
The area of the planetary orbit ellipse is


True anomaly would be arctan(''r''<sub>''y''/''r''</sub>''x''), magnitude of ''r'' would be {{radic|''r''&nbsp;·&nbsp;''r''}}.
:<math>A=\pi a b=\pi a(a\sqrt{1-\varepsilon^2})=\pi a^2\sqrt{1-\varepsilon^2}\, .</math>


===True anomaly, ''θ''===
The area speed of the radius vector sweeping the orbit area is
Note from the figure that
<math display="block">|cd| = |cs| + |sd|</math>
so that
<math display="block">a\cos E = a \varepsilon + r\cos\theta.</math>


Dividing by <math>a</math> and inserting from Kepler's first law
:<math>\dot A=\ell/ 2 \,</math>
<math display="block">\frac{r}{a} = \frac{1 - \varepsilon^2}{1 + \varepsilon\cos\theta}</math>
to get
<math display="block">
\cos E = \varepsilon + \frac{1 - \varepsilon^2}{1 + \varepsilon\cos\theta} \cos\theta
= \frac{\varepsilon (1 + \varepsilon\cos\theta) + \left(1 - \varepsilon^2\right)\cos\theta}{1 + \varepsilon\cos\theta}
= \frac{\varepsilon + \cos\theta}{1 + \varepsilon\cos\theta}.
</math>


The result is a usable relationship between the eccentric anomaly ''E'' and the true anomaly&nbsp;''θ''.
where


A computationally more convenient form follows by substituting into the ]:
:<math>\ell^2=pGM=a(1-\varepsilon^2)GM \,.</math>
<math display="block">\tan^2\frac{x}{2} = \frac{1 - \cos x}{1 + \cos x}.</math>


Get
The period of the orbit is
<math display="block">\begin{align}
\tan^2\frac{E}{2}
&= \frac{1 - \cos E}{1 + \cos E}
= \frac{1 - \frac{\varepsilon + \cos\theta}{1 + \varepsilon\cos\theta}}{1 + \frac{\varepsilon + \cos \theta}{1 + \varepsilon\cos\theta}} \\
&= \frac{(1 + \varepsilon\cos\theta) - (\varepsilon + \cos\theta)}{(1 + \varepsilon\cos\theta) + (\varepsilon + \cos\theta)}
= \frac{1 - \varepsilon}{1 + \varepsilon} \cdot \frac{1 - \cos\theta}{1 + \cos\theta}
= \frac{1 - \varepsilon}{1 + \varepsilon} \tan^2\frac{\theta}{2}.
\end{align}</math>


Multiplying by 1&nbsp;+&nbsp;''ε'' gives the result
:<math>P=\frac A \dot A =\frac {\pi a^2\sqrt{1-\varepsilon^2}}{\ell/2}=2\pi\frac {a^2\sqrt{1-\varepsilon^2}}{\ell}\,</math>
<math display="block">(1 - \varepsilon)\tan^2\frac{\theta}{2} = (1 + \varepsilon)\tan^2\frac{E}{2}</math>


This is the third step in the connection between time and position in the orbit.
satisfying


=== Distance, ''r'' ===
:<math>\left(\frac P{2 \pi}\right)^2=\left( \frac {a^2\sqrt{1-\varepsilon^2}}{\ell}\right)^2 = \frac {a^4(1-\varepsilon^2)}{\ell^2} = \frac {a^4(1-\varepsilon^2)}{a(1-\varepsilon^2)GM }=\frac{a^3}{GM}\,</math>
The fourth step is to compute the heliocentric distance ''r'' from the true anomaly ''θ'' by Kepler's first law:
<math display="block">r(1 + \varepsilon\cos\theta) = a\left(1 - \varepsilon^2\right)</math>


Using the relation above between ''θ'' and ''E'' the final equation for the distance ''r'' is:
implying Kepler's third law
<math display="block">r = a(1 - \varepsilon\cos E).</math>

:<math>P^2 \propto a^3 \ .</math>


==See also== ==See also==
{{cols}}
*]
*] * ]
*] * ]
*] * ]
*] * ]
*] * ]
* ]
*]
* ]
* ], relatively easy derivation of Kepler's laws starting with conservation of angular momentum
{{colend}}


== Explanatory notes ==
==Notes==
<references group="Nb"/>
{{reflist}}


==References== == References ==
{{Reflist}}
*Kepler's life is summarized on pages 627&ndash;623 and Book Five of his ''magnum opus'', '']'' (''harmonies of the world''), is reprinted on pages 635&ndash;732 of ''On the Shoulders of Giants'': The Great Works of Physics and Astronomy (works by ], ], ], ], and ]). ], ed. 2002 ISBN 0-7624-1348-4


== General bibliography ==
*A derivation of Kepler's third law of planetary motion is a standard topic in engineering mechanics classes. See, for example, pages 161&ndash;164 of {{Citation|first=J. L. |last=Meriam|year=1971|date=1966, 1971|title=Dynamics, 2nd ed. |location=New York|publisher=John Wiley|isbn=0-471-59601-9}}.
* Kepler's life is summarized on pp.&nbsp;523–627 and Book Five of his ''magnum opus'', '']'' (''harmonies of the world''), is reprinted on: {{Cite book |title=On the shoulders of giants: the great works of physics and astronomy |title-link=On the Shoulders of Giants (book) |date=2002 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-7624-1348-5 |editor-last=Hawking |editor-first=Stephen |editor-link=Stephen Hawking |location=Philadelphia |pages=635–732}}

* A derivation of Kepler's third law of planetary motion is a standard topic in engineering mechanics classes. See, for example: {{Cite book |last=Meriam |first=J. L. |url=https://archive.org/details/dynamics00meri |title=Dynamics |date=1971 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-471-59601-1 |edition=2nd |location=New York |pages=161–164 |orig-year=1966}}.
*Murray and Dermott, Solar System Dynamics, Cambridge University Press 1999, ISBN-10 0-521-57597-4
* {{Cite book |last=Murray |first=Carl D. |author-link=Carl D. Murray |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NY9iQgAACAAJ |title=Solar system dynamics |last2=Dermott |first2=S. F. |author-link2=Stanley Dermott |date=1999 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-521-57295-8 |location=Cambridge ; New York}}
* {{Cite book |last=Arnolʹd |first=V. I. |author-link=Vladimir Arnold |title=Mathematical methods of classical mechanics |title-link=Mathematical Methods of Classical Mechanics |date=1997 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-387-96890-2 |edition=2nd |series=Graduate texts in mathematics |location=New York |chapter=Chapter 2: Investigation of the Equations of Motion}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{commons category|Kepler motions}}
* B.Surendranath Reddy; animation of Kepler's laws:
* B.Surendranath Reddy; animation of Kepler's laws: {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131006041128/http://www.surendranath.org/Applets/Dynamics/Kepler/Kepler1.html |date=2013-10-06 }}
* Crowell, Benjamin, ''Conservation Laws'', , an ] that gives a proof of the first law without the use of calculus. (see section 5.2, p.112)
* Crowell, Benjamin, '''', an ] that gives a proof of the first law without the use of calculus (see section 15.7)
* David McNamara and Gianfranco Vidali, ''Kepler's Second Law - Java Interactive Tutorial'', , an interactive Java applet that aids in the understanding of Kepler's Second Law.
* David McNamara and Gianfranco Vidali, "", an interactive Java applet that aids in the understanding of Kepler's Second Law.
* University of Tennessee's Dept. Physics & Astronomy: Astronomy 161 page on Johannes Kepler: The Laws of Planetary Motion
* Cain, Gay (May 10, 2010), ''Astronomy Cast'', ""
* Equant compared to Kepler: interactive model
* University of Tennessee's Dept. Physics & Astronomy: Astronomy 161, ""
* Kepler's Third Law:interactive model
* Solar System Simulator () {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181213115626/https://www.physinf.com/NPM/NPM.html |date=2018-12-13 }}
* "" in ''From Stargazers to Starships'' by David P. Stern (10 October 2016)
*{{YouTube|dG9J0o7AwVs|"Kepler's Three Laws of Planetary Motion"}} by Jens Puhle (Dec 27, 2023) – a video explaining and visualizing Kepler's three laws of planetary motion


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Latest revision as of 03:40, 3 January 2025

Illustration of Kepler's laws with two planetary orbits.
  1. The orbits are ellipses, with foci F1 and F2 for Planet 1, and F1 and F3 for Planet 2. The Sun is at F1.
  2. The shaded areas A1 and A2 are equal, and are swept out in equal times by Planet 1's orbit.
  3. The ratio of Planet 1's orbit time to Planet 2's is ( a 1 / a 2 ) 3 / 2 {\textstyle ({a_{1}}/{a_{2}})^{3/2}} .
Part of a series on
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In astronomy, Kepler's laws of planetary motion, published by Johannes Kepler in 1609 (except the third law, and was fully published in 1619), describe the orbits of planets around the Sun. These laws replaced circular orbits and epicycles in the heliocentric theory of Nicolaus Copernicus with elliptical orbits and explained how planetary velocities vary. The three laws state that:

  1. The orbit of a planet is an ellipse with the Sun at one of the two foci.
  2. A line segment joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time.
  3. The square of a planet's orbital period is proportional to the cube of the length of the semi-major axis of its orbit.

The elliptical orbits of planets were indicated by calculations of the orbit of Mars. From this, Kepler inferred that other bodies in the Solar System, including those farther away from the Sun, also have elliptical orbits. The second law establishes that when a planet is closer to the Sun, it travels faster. The third law expresses that the farther a planet is from the Sun, the longer its orbital period.

Isaac Newton showed in 1687 that relationships like Kepler's would apply in the Solar System as a consequence of his own laws of motion and law of universal gravitation.

A more precise historical approach is found in Astronomia nova and Epitome Astronomiae Copernicanae.

Comparison to Copernicus

Johannes Kepler's laws improved the model of Copernicus. According to Copernicus:

  1. The planetary orbit is a circle with epicycles.
  2. The Sun is approximately at the center of the orbit.
  3. The speed of the planet in the main orbit is constant.

Despite being correct in saying that the planets revolved around the Sun, Copernicus was incorrect in defining their orbits. Introducing physical explanations for movement in space beyond just geometry, Kepler correctly defined the orbit of planets as follows:

  1. The planetary orbit is not a circle with epicycles, but an ellipse.
  2. The Sun is not at the center but at a focal point of the elliptical orbit.
  3. Neither the linear speed nor the angular speed of the planet in the orbit is constant, but the area speed (closely linked historically with the concept of angular momentum) is constant.

The eccentricity of the orbit of the Earth makes the time from the March equinox to the September equinox, around 186 days, unequal to the time from the September equinox to the March equinox, around 179 days. A diameter would cut the orbit into equal parts, but the plane through the Sun parallel to the equator of the Earth cuts the orbit into two parts with areas in a 186 to 179 ratio, so the eccentricity of the orbit of the Earth is approximately

e π 4 186 179 186 + 179 0.015 , {\displaystyle e\approx {\frac {\pi }{4}}{\frac {186-179}{186+179}}\approx 0.015,}

which is close to the correct value (0.016710218). The accuracy of this calculation requires that the two dates chosen be along the elliptical orbit's minor axis and that the midpoints of each half be along the major axis. As the two dates chosen here are equinoxes, this will be correct when perihelion, the date the Earth is closest to the Sun, falls on a solstice. The current perihelion, near January 4, is fairly close to the solstice of December 21 or 22.

Nomenclature

It took nearly two centuries for the current formulation of Kepler's work to take on its settled form. Voltaire's Eléments de la philosophie de Newton (Elements of Newton's Philosophy) of 1738 was the first publication to use the terminology of "laws". The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers in its article on Kepler (p. 620) states that the terminology of scientific laws for these discoveries was current at least from the time of Joseph de Lalande. It was the exposition of Robert Small, in An account of the astronomical discoveries of Kepler (1814) that made up the set of three laws, by adding in the third. Small also claimed, against the history, that these were empirical laws, based on inductive reasoning.

Further, the current usage of "Kepler's Second Law" is something of a misnomer. Kepler had two versions, related in a qualitative sense: the "distance law" and the "area law". The "area law" is what became the Second Law in the set of three; but Kepler did himself not privilege it in that way.

History

Kepler published his first two laws about planetary motion in 1609, having found them by analyzing the astronomical observations of Tycho Brahe. Kepler's third law was published in 1619. Kepler had believed in the Copernican model of the Solar System, which called for circular orbits, but he could not reconcile Brahe's highly precise observations with a circular fit to Mars' orbit – Mars coincidentally having the highest eccentricity of all planets except Mercury. His first law reflected this discovery.

In 1621, Kepler noted that his third law applies to the four brightest moons of Jupiter. Godefroy Wendelin also made this observation in 1643. The second law, in the "area law" form, was contested by Nicolaus Mercator in a book from 1664, but by 1670 his Philosophical Transactions were in its favour. As the century proceeded it became more widely accepted. The reception in Germany changed noticeably between 1688, the year in which Newton's Principia was published and was taken to be basically Copernican, and 1690, by which time work of Gottfried Leibniz on Kepler had been published.

Newton was credited with understanding that the second law is not special to the inverse square law of gravitation, being a consequence just of the radial nature of that law, whereas the other laws do depend on the inverse square form of the attraction. Carl Runge and Wilhelm Lenz much later identified a symmetry principle in the phase space of planetary motion (the orthogonal group O(4) acting) which accounts for the first and third laws in the case of Newtonian gravitation, as conservation of angular momentum does via rotational symmetry for the second law.

Formulary

The mathematical model of the kinematics of a planet subject to the laws allows a large range of further calculations.

First law

Kepler's first law states that:

The orbit of every planet is an ellipse with the sun at one of the two foci.

Kepler's first law placing the Sun at one of the foci of an elliptical orbit
Heliocentric coordinate system (rθ) for ellipse. Also shown are: semi-major axis a, semi-minor axis b and semi-latus rectum p; center of ellipse and its two foci marked by large dots. For θ = 0°, r = rmin and for θ = 180°, r = rmax.

Mathematically, an ellipse can be represented by the formula:

r = p 1 + ε cos θ , {\displaystyle r={\frac {p}{1+\varepsilon \,\cos \theta }},}

where p {\displaystyle p} is the semi-latus rectum, ε is the eccentricity of the ellipse, r is the distance from the Sun to the planet, and θ is the angle to the planet's current position from its closest approach, as seen from the Sun. So (rθ) are polar coordinates.

For an ellipse 0 < ε < 1 ; in the limiting case ε = 0, the orbit is a circle with the Sun at the centre (i.e. where there is zero eccentricity).

At θ = 0°, perihelion, the distance is minimum

r min = p 1 + ε {\displaystyle r_{\min }={\frac {p}{1+\varepsilon }}}

At θ = 90° and at θ = 270° the distance is equal to p {\displaystyle p} .

At θ = 180°, aphelion, the distance is maximum (by definition, aphelion is – invariably – perihelion plus 180°)

r max = p 1 ε {\displaystyle r_{\max }={\frac {p}{1-\varepsilon }}}

The semi-major axis a is the arithmetic mean between rmin and rmax:

a = r max + r min 2 a = p 1 ε 2 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}a&={\frac {r_{\max }+r_{\min }}{2}}\\a&={\frac {p}{1-\varepsilon ^{2}}}\end{aligned}}}

The semi-minor axis b is the geometric mean between rmin and rmax:

b = r max r min b = p 1 ε 2 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}b&={\sqrt {r_{\max }r_{\min }}}\\b&={\frac {p}{\sqrt {1-\varepsilon ^{2}}}}\end{aligned}}}

The semi-latus rectum p is the harmonic mean between rmin and rmax:

p = ( r max 1 + r min 1 2 ) 1 p a = r max r min = b 2 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}p&=\left({\frac {r_{\max }^{-1}+r_{\min }^{-1}}{2}}\right)^{-1}\\pa&=r_{\max }r_{\min }=b^{2}\,\end{aligned}}}

The eccentricity ε is the coefficient of variation between rmin and rmax:

ε = r max r min r max + r min . {\displaystyle \varepsilon ={\frac {r_{\max }-r_{\min }}{r_{\max }+r_{\min }}}.}

The area of the ellipse is

A = π a b . {\displaystyle A=\pi ab\,.}

The special case of a circle is ε = 0, resulting in r = p = rmin = rmax = a = b and A = πr.

Second law

Kepler's second law states that:

A line joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time.

The same (blue) area is swept out in a fixed time period. The green arrow is velocity. The purple arrow directed towards the Sun is the acceleration. The other two purple arrows are acceleration components parallel and perpendicular to the velocity.

The orbital radius and angular velocity of the planet in the elliptical orbit will vary. This is shown in the animation: the planet travels faster when closer to the Sun, then slower when farther from the Sun. Kepler's second law states that the blue sector has constant area.

History and proofs

Kepler notably arrived at this law through assumptions that were either only approximately true or outright false and can be outlined as follows:

  1. Planets are pushed around the Sun by a force from the Sun. This false assumption relies on incorrect Aristotelian physics that an object needs to be pushed to maintain motion.
  2. The propelling force from the Sun is inversely proportional to the distance from the Sun. Kepler reasoned this, believing that gravity spreading in three dimensions would be a waste, since the planets inhabited a plane. Thus, an inverse instead of the inverse square law.
  3. Because Kepler believed that force would be proportional to velocity, it followed from statements #1 and #2 that velocity would be inverse to the distance from the sun. This is also an incorrect tenet of Aristotelian physics.
  4. Since velocity is inverse to time, the distance from the sun would be proportional to the time to cover a small piece of the orbit. This is approximately true for elliptical orbits.
  5. The area swept out is proportional to the overall time. This is also approximately true.
  6. The orbits of a planet are circular (Kepler discovered his Second Law before his First Law, which contradicts this).

Nevertheless, the result of the Second Law is exactly true, as it is logically equivalent to the conservation of angular momentum, which is true for any body experiencing a radially symmetric force. A correct proof can be shown through this. Since the cross product of two vectors gives the area of a parallelogram possessing sides of those vectors, the triangular area dA swept out in a short period of time is given by half the cross product of the r and dx vectors, for some short piece of the orbit, dx.

d A = 1 2 ( r × d x ) = 1 2 ( r × v d t ) {\displaystyle dA={\frac {1}{2}}({\vec {r}}\times {\vec {dx}})={\frac {1}{2}}({\vec {r}}\times {\vec {v}}dt)} for a small piece of the orbit dx and time to cover it dt.

Thus d A d t = 1 2 ( r × v ) . {\displaystyle {\frac {dA}{dt}}={\frac {1}{2}}({\vec {r}}\times {\vec {v}}).}

d A d t = 1 m 1 2 ( r × p ) . {\displaystyle {\frac {dA}{dt}}={\frac {1}{m}}{\frac {1}{2}}({\vec {r}}\times {\vec {p}}).}

Since the final expression is proportional to the total angular momentum ( r × p ) {\displaystyle ({\vec {r}}\times {\vec {p}})} , Kepler's equal area law will hold for any system that conserves angular momentum. Since any radial force will produce no torque on the planet's motion, angular momentum will be conserved.

In terms of elliptical parameters

In a small time d t {\displaystyle dt} the planet sweeps out a small triangle having base line r {\displaystyle r} and height r d θ {\displaystyle r\,d\theta } and area d A = 1 2 r r d θ {\textstyle dA={\frac {1}{2}}\cdot r\cdot r\,d\theta } , so the constant areal velocity is d A d t = r 2 2 d θ d t . {\displaystyle {\frac {dA}{dt}}={\frac {r^{2}}{2}}{\frac {d\theta }{dt}}.}

The area enclosed by the elliptical orbit is π a b {\displaystyle \pi ab} . So the period T {\displaystyle T} satisfies

T r 2 2 d θ d t = π a b {\displaystyle T\cdot {\frac {r^{2}}{2}}{\frac {d\theta }{dt}}=\pi ab}

and the mean motion of the planet around the Sun

n = 2 π T {\displaystyle n={\frac {2\pi }{T}}}

satisfies

r 2 d θ = a b n d t . {\displaystyle r^{2}\,d\theta =abn\,dt.}

And so, d A d t = a b n 2 = π a b T . {\displaystyle {\frac {dA}{dt}}={\frac {abn}{2}}={\frac {\pi ab}{T}}.}

Orbits of planets with varying eccentricities.
Low High
Planet orbiting the Sun in a circular orbit (e=0.0)
Planet orbiting the Sun in an orbit with e=0.5
Planet orbiting the Sun in an orbit with e=0.2
Planet orbiting the Sun in an orbit with e=0.8
The red ray rotates at a constant angular velocity and with the same orbital time period as the planet, T = 1 {\displaystyle T=1} .

S: Sun at the primary focus, C: Centre of ellipse, S': The secondary focus. In each case, the area of all sectors depicted is identical.

Third law

Kepler's third law states that:

The ratio of the square of an object's orbital period with the cube of the semi-major axis of its orbit is the same for all objects orbiting the same primary.

This captures the relationship between the distance of planets from the Sun, and their orbital periods.

Kepler enunciated in 1619 this third law in a laborious attempt to determine what he viewed as the "music of the spheres" according to precise laws, and express it in terms of musical notation. It was therefore known as the harmonic law. The original form of this law (referring to not the semi-major axis, but rather a "mean distance") holds true only for planets with small eccentricities near zero.

Using Newton's law of gravitation (published 1687), this relation can be found in the case of a circular orbit by setting the centripetal force equal to the gravitational force:

m r ω 2 = G m M r 2 {\displaystyle mr\omega ^{2}=G{\frac {mM}{r^{2}}}}

Then, expressing the angular velocity ω in terms of the orbital period T {\displaystyle {T}} and then rearranging, results in Kepler's Third Law:

m r ( 2 π T ) 2 = G m M r 2 T 2 = ( 4 π 2 G M ) r 3 T 2 r 3 {\displaystyle mr\left({\frac {2\pi }{T}}\right)^{2}=G{\frac {mM}{r^{2}}}\implies T^{2}=\left({\frac {4\pi ^{2}}{GM}}\right)r^{3}\implies T^{2}\propto r^{3}}

A more detailed derivation can be done with general elliptical orbits, instead of circles, as well as orbiting the center of mass, instead of just the large mass. This results in replacing a circular radius, r {\displaystyle r} , with the semi-major axis, a {\displaystyle a} , of the elliptical relative motion of one mass relative to the other, as well as replacing the large mass M {\displaystyle M} with M + m {\displaystyle M+m} . However, with planet masses being so much smaller than the Sun, this correction is often ignored. The full corresponding formula is:

a 3 T 2 = G ( M + m ) 4 π 2 G M 4 π 2 7.496 × 10 6 AU 3 days 2  is constant {\displaystyle {\frac {a^{3}}{T^{2}}}={\frac {G(M+m)}{4\pi ^{2}}}\approx {\frac {GM}{4\pi ^{2}}}\approx 7.496\times 10^{-6}{\frac {{\text{AU}}^{3}}{{\text{days}}^{2}}}{\text{ is constant}}}

where M {\displaystyle M} is the mass of the Sun, m {\displaystyle m} is the mass of the planet, G {\displaystyle G} is the gravitational constant, T {\displaystyle T} is the orbital period and a {\displaystyle a} is the elliptical semi-major axis, and AU {\displaystyle {\text{AU}}} is the astronomical unit, the average distance from earth to the sun.

Table

The following table shows the data used by Kepler to empirically derive his law:

Data used by Kepler (1618)
Planet Mean distance
to sun (AU)
Period
(days)
R 3 T 2 {\textstyle {\frac {R^{3}}{T^{2}}}}  (10 AU/day)
Mercury 0.389 87.77 7.64
Venus 0.724 224.70 7.52
Earth 1 365.25 7.50
Mars 1.524 686.95 7.50
Jupiter 5.20 4332.62 7.49
Saturn 9.510 10759.2 7.43

Kepler became aware of John Napier's recent invention of logarithms and log-log graphs before he discovered the pattern.

Upon finding this pattern Kepler wrote:

I first believed I was dreaming... But it is absolutely certain and exact that the ratio which exists between the period times of any two planets is precisely the ratio of the 3/2th power of the mean distance.

— translated from Harmonies of the World by Kepler (1619)
Log-log plot of period T vs semi-major axis a (average of aphelion and perihelion) of some Solar System orbits (crosses denoting Kepler's values) showing that a³/T² is constant (green line)


For comparison, here are modern estimates:

Modern data
Planet Semi-major axis (AU) Period (days) a 3 T 2 {\textstyle {\frac {a^{3}}{T^{2}}}}  (10 AU/day)
Mercury 0.38710 87.9693 7.496
Venus 0.72333 224.7008 7.496
Earth 1 365.2564 7.496
Mars 1.52366 686.9796 7.495
Jupiter 5.20336 4332.8201 7.504
Saturn 9.53707 10775.599 7.498
Uranus 19.1913 30687.153 7.506
Neptune 30.0690 60190.03 7.504

Planetary acceleration

Isaac Newton computed in his Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica the acceleration of a planet moving according to Kepler's first and second laws.

  1. The direction of the acceleration is towards the Sun.
  2. The magnitude of the acceleration is inversely proportional to the square of the planet's distance from the Sun (the inverse square law).

This implies that the Sun may be the physical cause of the acceleration of planets. However, Newton states in his Principia that he considers forces from a mathematical point of view, not a physical, thereby taking an instrumentalist view. Moreover, he does not assign a cause to gravity.

Newton defined the force acting on a planet to be the product of its mass and the acceleration (see Newton's laws of motion). So:

  1. Every planet is attracted towards the Sun.
  2. The force acting on a planet is directly proportional to the mass of the planet and is inversely proportional to the square of its distance from the Sun.

The Sun plays an unsymmetrical part, which is unjustified. So he assumed, in Newton's law of universal gravitation:

  1. All bodies in the Solar System attract one another.
  2. The force between two bodies is in direct proportion to the product of their masses and in inverse proportion to the square of the distance between them.

As the planets have small masses compared to that of the Sun, the orbits conform approximately to Kepler's laws. Newton's model improves upon Kepler's model, and fits actual observations more accurately. (See two-body problem.)

Below comes the detailed calculation of the acceleration of a planet moving according to Kepler's first and second laws.

Acceleration vector

See also: Polar coordinate § Vector calculus

From the heliocentric point of view consider the vector to the planet r = r r ^ {\displaystyle \mathbf {r} =r{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}} where r {\displaystyle r} is the distance to the planet and r ^ {\displaystyle {\hat {\mathbf {r} }}} is a unit vector pointing towards the planet. d r ^ d t = r ^ ˙ = θ ˙ θ ^ , d θ ^ d t = θ ^ ˙ = θ ˙ r ^ {\displaystyle {\frac {d{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}}{dt}}={\dot {\hat {\mathbf {r} }}}={\dot {\theta }}{\hat {\boldsymbol {\theta }}},\qquad {\frac {d{\hat {\boldsymbol {\theta }}}}{dt}}={\dot {\hat {\boldsymbol {\theta }}}}=-{\dot {\theta }}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}}

where θ ^ {\displaystyle {\hat {\boldsymbol {\theta }}}} is the unit vector whose direction is 90 degrees counterclockwise of r ^ {\displaystyle {\hat {\mathbf {r} }}} , and θ {\displaystyle \theta } is the polar angle, and where a dot on top of the variable signifies differentiation with respect to time.

Differentiate the position vector twice to obtain the velocity vector and the acceleration vector: r ˙ = r ˙ r ^ + r r ^ ˙ = r ˙ r ^ + r θ ˙ θ ^ , r ¨ = ( r ¨ r ^ + r ˙ r ^ ˙ ) + ( r ˙ θ ˙ θ ^ + r θ ¨ θ ^ + r θ ˙ θ ^ ˙ ) = ( r ¨ r θ ˙ 2 ) r ^ + ( r θ ¨ + 2 r ˙ θ ˙ ) θ ^ . {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}{\dot {\mathbf {r} }}&={\dot {r}}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}+r{\dot {\hat {\mathbf {r} }}}={\dot {r}}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}+r{\dot {\theta }}{\hat {\boldsymbol {\theta }}},\\{\ddot {\mathbf {r} }}&=\left({\ddot {r}}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}+{\dot {r}}{\dot {\hat {\mathbf {r} }}}\right)+\left({\dot {r}}{\dot {\theta }}{\hat {\boldsymbol {\theta }}}+r{\ddot {\theta }}{\hat {\boldsymbol {\theta }}}+r{\dot {\theta }}{\dot {\hat {\boldsymbol {\theta }}}}\right)=\left({\ddot {r}}-r{\dot {\theta }}^{2}\right){\hat {\mathbf {r} }}+\left(r{\ddot {\theta }}+2{\dot {r}}{\dot {\theta }}\right){\hat {\boldsymbol {\theta }}}.\end{aligned}}}

So r ¨ = a r r ^ + a θ θ ^ {\displaystyle {\ddot {\mathbf {r} }}=a_{r}{\hat {\boldsymbol {r}}}+a_{\theta }{\hat {\boldsymbol {\theta }}}} where the radial acceleration is a r = r ¨ r θ ˙ 2 {\displaystyle a_{r}={\ddot {r}}-r{\dot {\theta }}^{2}} and the transversal acceleration is a θ = r θ ¨ + 2 r ˙ θ ˙ . {\displaystyle a_{\theta }=r{\ddot {\theta }}+2{\dot {r}}{\dot {\theta }}.}

Inverse square law

Kepler's second law says that r 2 θ ˙ = n a b {\displaystyle r^{2}{\dot {\theta }}=nab} is constant.

The transversal acceleration a θ {\displaystyle a_{\theta }} is zero: d ( r 2 θ ˙ ) d t = r ( 2 r ˙ θ ˙ + r θ ¨ ) = r a θ = 0. {\displaystyle {\frac {d\left(r^{2}{\dot {\theta }}\right)}{dt}}=r\left(2{\dot {r}}{\dot {\theta }}+r{\ddot {\theta }}\right)=ra_{\theta }=0.}

So the acceleration of a planet obeying Kepler's second law is directed towards the Sun.

The radial acceleration a r {\displaystyle a_{\text{r}}} is a r = r ¨ r θ ˙ 2 = r ¨ r ( n a b r 2 ) 2 = r ¨ n 2 a 2 b 2 r 3 . {\displaystyle a_{\text{r}}={\ddot {r}}-r{\dot {\theta }}^{2}={\ddot {r}}-r\left({\frac {nab}{r^{2}}}\right)^{2}={\ddot {r}}-{\frac {n^{2}a^{2}b^{2}}{r^{3}}}.}

Kepler's first law states that the orbit is described by the equation: p r = 1 + ε cos ( θ ) . {\displaystyle {\frac {p}{r}}=1+\varepsilon \cos(\theta ).}

Differentiating with respect to time p r ˙ r 2 = ε sin ( θ ) θ ˙ {\displaystyle -{\frac {p{\dot {r}}}{r^{2}}}=-\varepsilon \sin(\theta )\,{\dot {\theta }}} or p r ˙ = n a b ε sin ( θ ) . {\displaystyle p{\dot {r}}=nab\,\varepsilon \sin(\theta ).}

Differentiating once more p r ¨ = n a b ε cos ( θ ) θ ˙ = n a b ε cos ( θ ) n a b r 2 = n 2 a 2 b 2 r 2 ε cos ( θ ) . {\displaystyle p{\ddot {r}}=nab\varepsilon \cos(\theta )\,{\dot {\theta }}=nab\varepsilon \cos(\theta )\,{\frac {nab}{r^{2}}}={\frac {n^{2}a^{2}b^{2}}{r^{2}}}\varepsilon \cos(\theta ).}

The radial acceleration a r {\displaystyle a_{\text{r}}} satisfies p a r = n 2 a 2 b 2 r 2 ε cos ( θ ) p n 2 a 2 b 2 r 3 = n 2 a 2 b 2 r 2 ( ε cos ( θ ) p r ) . {\displaystyle pa_{\text{r}}={\frac {n^{2}a^{2}b^{2}}{r^{2}}}\varepsilon \cos(\theta )-p{\frac {n^{2}a^{2}b^{2}}{r^{3}}}={\frac {n^{2}a^{2}b^{2}}{r^{2}}}\left(\varepsilon \cos(\theta )-{\frac {p}{r}}\right).}

Substituting the equation of the ellipse gives p a r = n 2 a 2 b 2 r 2 ( p r 1 p r ) = n 2 a 2 r 2 b 2 . {\displaystyle pa_{\text{r}}={\frac {n^{2}a^{2}b^{2}}{r^{2}}}\left({\frac {p}{r}}-1-{\frac {p}{r}}\right)=-{\frac {n^{2}a^{2}}{r^{2}}}b^{2}.}

The relation b 2 = p a {\displaystyle b^{2}=pa} gives the simple final result a r = n 2 a 3 r 2 . {\displaystyle a_{\text{r}}=-{\frac {n^{2}a^{3}}{r^{2}}}.}

This means that the acceleration vector r ¨ {\displaystyle \mathbf {\ddot {r}} } of any planet obeying Kepler's first and second law satisfies the inverse square law r ¨ = α r 2 r ^ {\displaystyle \mathbf {\ddot {r}} =-{\frac {\alpha }{r^{2}}}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}} where α = n 2 a 3 {\displaystyle \alpha =n^{2}a^{3}} is a constant, and r ^ {\displaystyle {\hat {\mathbf {r} }}} is the unit vector pointing from the Sun towards the planet, and r {\displaystyle r\,} is the distance between the planet and the Sun.

Since mean motion n = 2 π T {\displaystyle n={\frac {2\pi }{T}}} where T {\displaystyle T} is the period, according to Kepler's third law, α {\displaystyle \alpha } has the same value for all the planets. So the inverse square law for planetary accelerations applies throughout the entire Solar System.

The inverse square law is a differential equation. The solutions to this differential equation include the Keplerian motions, as shown, but they also include motions where the orbit is a hyperbola or parabola or a straight line. (See Kepler orbit.)

Newton's law of gravitation

By Newton's second law, the gravitational force that acts on the planet is: F = m planet r ¨ = m planet α r 2 r ^ {\displaystyle \mathbf {F} =m_{\text{planet}}\mathbf {\ddot {r}} =-m_{\text{planet}}\alpha r^{-2}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}}

where m planet {\displaystyle m_{\text{planet}}} is the mass of the planet and α {\displaystyle \alpha } has the same value for all planets in the Solar System. According to Newton's third law, the Sun is attracted to the planet by a force of the same magnitude. Since the force is proportional to the mass of the planet, under the symmetric consideration, it should also be proportional to the mass of the Sun, m Sun {\displaystyle m_{\text{Sun}}} . So α = G m Sun {\displaystyle \alpha =Gm_{\text{Sun}}} where G {\displaystyle G} is the gravitational constant.

The acceleration of Solar System body number i is, according to Newton's laws: r ¨ i = G j i m j r i j 2 r ^ i j {\displaystyle \mathbf {\ddot {r}} _{i}=G\sum _{j\neq i}m_{j}r_{ij}^{-2}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}_{ij}} where m j {\displaystyle m_{j}} is the mass of body j, r i j {\displaystyle r_{ij}} is the distance between body i and body j, r ^ i j {\displaystyle {\hat {\mathbf {r} }}_{ij}} is the unit vector from body i towards body j, and the vector summation is over all bodies in the Solar System, besides i itself.

In the special case where there are only two bodies in the Solar System, Earth and Sun, the acceleration becomes r ¨ Earth = G m Sun r Earth , Sun 2 r ^ Earth , Sun {\displaystyle \mathbf {\ddot {r}} _{\text{Earth}}=Gm_{\text{Sun}}r_{{\text{Earth}},{\text{Sun}}}^{-2}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}_{{\text{Earth}},{\text{Sun}}}} which is the acceleration of the Kepler motion. So this Earth moves around the Sun according to Kepler's laws.

If the two bodies in the Solar System are Moon and Earth the acceleration of the Moon becomes r ¨ Moon = G m Earth r Moon , Earth 2 r ^ Moon , Earth {\displaystyle \mathbf {\ddot {r}} _{\text{Moon}}=Gm_{\text{Earth}}r_{{\text{Moon}},{\text{Earth}}}^{-2}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}_{{\text{Moon}},{\text{Earth}}}}

So in this approximation, the Moon moves around the Earth according to Kepler's laws.

In the three-body case the accelerations are r ¨ Sun = G m Earth r Sun , Earth 2 r ^ Sun , Earth + G m Moon r Sun , Moon 2 r ^ Sun , Moon r ¨ Earth = G m Sun r Earth , Sun 2 r ^ Earth , Sun + G m Moon r Earth , Moon 2 r ^ Earth , Moon r ¨ Moon = G m Sun r Moon , Sun 2 r ^ Moon , Sun + G m Earth r Moon , Earth 2 r ^ Moon , Earth {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\mathbf {\ddot {r}} _{\text{Sun}}&=Gm_{\text{Earth}}r_{{\text{Sun}},{\text{Earth}}}^{-2}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}_{{\text{Sun}},{\text{Earth}}}+Gm_{\text{Moon}}r_{{\text{Sun}},{\text{Moon}}}^{-2}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}_{{\text{Sun}},{\text{Moon}}}\\\mathbf {\ddot {r}} _{\text{Earth}}&=Gm_{\text{Sun}}r_{{\text{Earth}},{\text{Sun}}}^{-2}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}_{{\text{Earth}},{\text{Sun}}}+Gm_{\text{Moon}}r_{{\text{Earth}},{\text{Moon}}}^{-2}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}_{{\text{Earth}},{\text{Moon}}}\\\mathbf {\ddot {r}} _{\text{Moon}}&=Gm_{\text{Sun}}r_{{\text{Moon}},{\text{Sun}}}^{-2}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}_{{\text{Moon}},{\text{Sun}}}+Gm_{\text{Earth}}r_{{\text{Moon}},{\text{Earth}}}^{-2}{\hat {\mathbf {r} }}_{{\text{Moon}},{\text{Earth}}}\end{aligned}}}

These accelerations are not those of Kepler orbits, and the three-body problem is complicated. But Keplerian approximation is the basis for perturbation calculations. (See Lunar theory.)

Position as a function of time

Kepler used his two first laws to compute the position of a planet as a function of time. His method involves the solution of a transcendental equation called Kepler's equation.

The procedure for calculating the heliocentric polar coordinates (r,θ) of a planet as a function of the time t since perihelion, is the following five steps:

  1. Compute the mean motion n = (2π rad)/P, where P is the period.
  2. Compute the mean anomaly M = nt, where t is the time since perihelion.
  3. Compute the eccentric anomaly E by solving Kepler's equation: M = E ε sin E , {\displaystyle M=E-\varepsilon \sin E,} where ε {\displaystyle \varepsilon } is the eccentricity.
  4. Compute the true anomaly θ by solving the equation: ( 1 ε ) tan 2 θ 2 = ( 1 + ε ) tan 2 E 2 {\displaystyle (1-\varepsilon )\tan ^{2}{\frac {\theta }{2}}=(1+\varepsilon )\tan ^{2}{\frac {E}{2}}}
  5. Compute the heliocentric distance r: r = a ( 1 ε cos E ) , {\displaystyle r=a(1-\varepsilon \cos E),} where a {\displaystyle a} is the semimajor axis.

The position polar coordinates (r,θ) can now be written as a Cartesian vector p = r cos θ , sin θ {\displaystyle \mathbf {p} =r\left\langle \cos {\theta },\sin {\theta }\right\rangle } and the Cartesian velocity vector can then be calculated as v = μ a r sin E , 1 ε 2 cos E {\displaystyle \mathbf {v} ={\frac {\sqrt {\mu a}}{r}}\left\langle -\sin {E},{\sqrt {1-\varepsilon ^{2}}}\cos {E}\right\rangle } , where μ {\displaystyle \mu } is the standard gravitational parameter.

The important special case of circular orbit, ε = 0, gives θ = E = M. Because the uniform circular motion was considered to be normal, a deviation from this motion was considered an anomaly.

The proof of this procedure is shown below.

Mean anomaly, M

Main article: Mean anomaly
Geometric construction for Kepler's calculation of θ. The Sun (located at the focus) is labeled S and the planet P. The auxiliary circle is an aid to calculation. Line xd is perpendicular to the base and through the planet P. The shaded sectors are arranged to have equal areas by positioning of point y.

The Keplerian problem assumes an elliptical orbit and the four points:

  • s the Sun (at one focus of ellipse);
  • z the perihelion
  • c the center of the ellipse
  • p the planet

and

  • a = | c z | , {\displaystyle a=|cz|,} distance between center and perihelion, the semimajor axis,
  • ε = | c s | a , {\displaystyle \varepsilon ={|cs| \over a},} the eccentricity,
  • b = a 1 ε 2 , {\displaystyle b=a{\sqrt {1-\varepsilon ^{2}}},} the semiminor axis,
  • r = | s p | , {\displaystyle r=|sp|,} the distance between Sun and planet.
  • θ = z s p , {\displaystyle \theta =\angle zsp,} the direction to the planet as seen from the Sun, the true anomaly.

The problem is to compute the polar coordinates (r,θ) of the planet from the time since perihelion, t.

It is solved in steps. Kepler considered the circle with the major axis as a diameter, and

  • x , {\displaystyle x,} the projection of the planet to the auxiliary circle
  • y , {\displaystyle y,} the point on the circle such that the sector areas |zcy| and |zsx| are equal,
  • M = z c y , {\displaystyle M=\angle zcy,} the mean anomaly.

The sector areas are related by | z s p | = b a | z s x | . {\displaystyle |zsp|={\frac {b}{a}}\cdot |zsx|.}

The circular sector area | z c y | = a 2 M 2 . {\displaystyle |zcy|={\frac {a^{2}M}{2}}.}

The area swept since perihelion, | z s p | = b a | z s x | = b a | z c y | = b a a 2 M 2 = a b M 2 , {\displaystyle |zsp|={\frac {b}{a}}\cdot |zsx|={\frac {b}{a}}\cdot |zcy|={\frac {b}{a}}\cdot {\frac {a^{2}M}{2}}={\frac {abM}{2}},} is by Kepler's second law proportional to time since perihelion. So the mean anomaly, M, is proportional to time since perihelion, t. M = n t , {\displaystyle M=nt,} where n is the mean motion.

Eccentric anomaly, E

When the mean anomaly M is computed, the goal is to compute the true anomaly θ. The function θ = f(M) is, however, not elementary. Kepler's solution is to use E = z c x , {\displaystyle E=\angle zcx,} x as seen from the centre, the eccentric anomaly as an intermediate variable, and first compute E as a function of M by solving Kepler's equation below, and then compute the true anomaly θ from the eccentric anomaly E. Here are the details. | z c y | = | z s x | = | z c x | | s c x | w i t h | s c x | = | c s | . | d x | 2 a 2 M 2 = a 2 E 2 a ε a sin E 2 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}|zcy|&=|zsx|=|zcx|-|scx|\\with|scx|&={\frac {|cs|.|dx|}{2}}\\{\frac {a^{2}M}{2}}&={\frac {a^{2}E}{2}}-{\frac {a\varepsilon \cdot a\sin E}{2}}\end{aligned}}}

Division by a/2 gives Kepler's equation M = E ε sin E . {\displaystyle M=E-\varepsilon \sin E.}

This equation gives M as a function of E. Determining E for a given M is the inverse problem. Iterative numerical algorithms are commonly used.

Having computed the eccentric anomaly E, the next step is to calculate the true anomaly θ.

But note: Cartesian position coordinates with reference to the center of ellipse are (a cos Eb sin E)

With reference to the Sun (with coordinates (c,0) = (ae,0) ), r = (a cos Eae, b sin E)

True anomaly would be arctan(ry/rx), magnitude of r would be √r · r.

True anomaly, θ

Note from the figure that | c d | = | c s | + | s d | {\displaystyle |cd|=|cs|+|sd|} so that a cos E = a ε + r cos θ . {\displaystyle a\cos E=a\varepsilon +r\cos \theta .}

Dividing by a {\displaystyle a} and inserting from Kepler's first law r a = 1 ε 2 1 + ε cos θ {\displaystyle {\frac {r}{a}}={\frac {1-\varepsilon ^{2}}{1+\varepsilon \cos \theta }}} to get cos E = ε + 1 ε 2 1 + ε cos θ cos θ = ε ( 1 + ε cos θ ) + ( 1 ε 2 ) cos θ 1 + ε cos θ = ε + cos θ 1 + ε cos θ . {\displaystyle \cos E=\varepsilon +{\frac {1-\varepsilon ^{2}}{1+\varepsilon \cos \theta }}\cos \theta ={\frac {\varepsilon (1+\varepsilon \cos \theta )+\left(1-\varepsilon ^{2}\right)\cos \theta }{1+\varepsilon \cos \theta }}={\frac {\varepsilon +\cos \theta }{1+\varepsilon \cos \theta }}.}

The result is a usable relationship between the eccentric anomaly E and the true anomaly θ.

A computationally more convenient form follows by substituting into the trigonometric identity: tan 2 x 2 = 1 cos x 1 + cos x . {\displaystyle \tan ^{2}{\frac {x}{2}}={\frac {1-\cos x}{1+\cos x}}.}

Get tan 2 E 2 = 1 cos E 1 + cos E = 1 ε + cos θ 1 + ε cos θ 1 + ε + cos θ 1 + ε cos θ = ( 1 + ε cos θ ) ( ε + cos θ ) ( 1 + ε cos θ ) + ( ε + cos θ ) = 1 ε 1 + ε 1 cos θ 1 + cos θ = 1 ε 1 + ε tan 2 θ 2 . {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\tan ^{2}{\frac {E}{2}}&={\frac {1-\cos E}{1+\cos E}}={\frac {1-{\frac {\varepsilon +\cos \theta }{1+\varepsilon \cos \theta }}}{1+{\frac {\varepsilon +\cos \theta }{1+\varepsilon \cos \theta }}}}\\&={\frac {(1+\varepsilon \cos \theta )-(\varepsilon +\cos \theta )}{(1+\varepsilon \cos \theta )+(\varepsilon +\cos \theta )}}={\frac {1-\varepsilon }{1+\varepsilon }}\cdot {\frac {1-\cos \theta }{1+\cos \theta }}={\frac {1-\varepsilon }{1+\varepsilon }}\tan ^{2}{\frac {\theta }{2}}.\end{aligned}}}

Multiplying by 1 + ε gives the result ( 1 ε ) tan 2 θ 2 = ( 1 + ε ) tan 2 E 2 {\displaystyle (1-\varepsilon )\tan ^{2}{\frac {\theta }{2}}=(1+\varepsilon )\tan ^{2}{\frac {E}{2}}}

This is the third step in the connection between time and position in the orbit.

Distance, r

The fourth step is to compute the heliocentric distance r from the true anomaly θ by Kepler's first law: r ( 1 + ε cos θ ) = a ( 1 ε 2 ) {\displaystyle r(1+\varepsilon \cos \theta )=a\left(1-\varepsilon ^{2}\right)}

Using the relation above between θ and E the final equation for the distance r is: r = a ( 1 ε cos E ) . {\displaystyle r=a(1-\varepsilon \cos E).}

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. In 1621, Johannes Kepler noted that Jupiter's moons obey (approximately) his third law in his Epitome Astronomiae Copernicanae (Linz ("Lentiis ad Danubium"), (Austria): Johann Planck, 1622), book 4, part 2, pages 554–555. From pp. 554–555: " ... plane ut est cum sex planet circa Solem, ... prodit Marius in suo mundo Ioviali ista 3.5.8.13 (vel 14. Galilæo) ... Periodica vero tempora prodit idem Marius ... sunt maiora simplis, minora vero duplis." (... just as it is clearly among the six planets around the Sun, so also it is among the four of Jupiter, because around the body of Jupiter any that can go farther from it, orbits slower, and even that is not in the same proportion, but greater ; that is, 3/2 (sescupla) of the proportion of each of the distances from Jupiter, which is clearly the very as is used for the six planets above. In his The World of Jupiter , "Marius" presents these distances, from Jupiter, of the four of Jupiter: 3, 5, 8, 13 (or 14 Galileo) ... Mayr presents their time periods: 1 day 18 1/2 hours, 3 days 13 1/3 hours, 7 days 2 hours, 16 days 18 hours: for all the proportion is greater than double, thus greater than of the distances 3, 5, 8, 13 or 14, although less than of the squares, which double the proportions of the distances, namely 9, 25, 64, 169 or 196, just as 3/2 is also greater than 1 but less than 2.)
  2. Godefroy Wendelin wrote a letter to Giovanni Battista Riccioli about the relationship between the distances of the Jovian moons from Jupiter and the periods of their orbits, showing that the periods and distances conformed to Kepler's third law. See: Joanne Baptista Riccioli, Almagestum novum ... (Bologna (Bononia), (Italy): Victor Benati, 1651), volume 1, page 492 Scholia III. In the margin beside the relevant paragraph is printed: Vendelini ingeniosa speculatio circa motus & intervalla satellitum Jovis. (Wendelin's clever speculation about the movement and distances of Jupiter's satellites.) From p. 492: "III. Non minus Kepleriana ingeniosa est Vendelini ... & D. 7. 164/1000. pro penextimo, & D. 16. 756/1000. pro extimo." (No less clever Kepler's is the most keen astronomer Wendelin's investigation of the proportion of the periods and distances of Jupiter's satellites, which he had communicated to me with great generosity a very long and very learned letter. So, just as in the larger planets, the planets' mean distances from the Sun are respectively in the 3/2 ratio of their periods; so the distances of these minor planets of Jupiter from Jupiter (which are 3, 5, 8, and 14) are respectively in the 3/2 ratio of periods (which are 1.769 days for the innermost , 3.554 days for the next to the innermost , 7.164 days for the next to the outermost , and 16.756 days for the outermost ).)

References

  1. ^ "Kepler's Laws". hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu. Retrieved 2022-12-13.
  2. ^ "Orbits and Kepler's Laws". NASA Solar System Exploration. Retrieved 2022-12-13.
  3. "Planetary Motion: The History of an Idea That Launched the Scientific Revolution". earthobservatory.nasa.gov. 2009-07-07. Retrieved 2022-12-13.
  4. "Nicolaus Copernicus". history.com. Retrieved 2022-12-13.
  5. ^ Gingerich, Owen (2011). "The great Martian catastrophe and how Kepler fixed it" (PDF). Physics Today. 64 (9): 50–54. Bibcode:2011PhT....64i..50G. doi:10.1063/PT.3.1259. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  6. Voltaire, Eléments de la philosophie de Newton (London: 1738). See, for example:
    • From p. 162: "Par une des grandes loix de Kepler, toute Planete décrit des aires égales en temp égaux : par une autre loi non-moins sûre, chaque Planete fait sa révolution autour du Soleil en telle sort, que si, sa moyenne distance au Soleil est 10. prenez le cube de ce nombre, ce qui sera 1000., & le tems de la révolution de cette Planete autour du Soleil sera proportionné à la racine quarrée de ce nombre 1000." (By one of the great laws of Kepler, each planet describes equal areas in equal times; by another law no less certain, each planet makes its revolution around the sun in such a way that if its mean distance from the sun is 10, take the cube of that number, which will be 1000, and the time of the revolution of that planet around the sun will be proportional to the square root of that number 1000.)
    • From p. 205: "Il est donc prouvé par la loi de Kepler & par celle de Neuton, que chaque Planete gravite vers le Soleil, ..." (It is thus proved by the law of Kepler and by that of Newton, that each planet revolves around the sun ...)
  7. ^ Wilson, Curtis (May 1994). "Kepler's Laws, So-Called" (PDF). HAD News (31): 1–2. Retrieved December 27, 2016.
  8. De la Lande, Astronomie, vol. 1 (Paris: Desaint & Saillant, 1764). See, for example:
    • From p. 390: "... mais suivant la fameuse loi de Kepler, qui sera expliquée dans le Livre suivant (892), le rapport des temps périodiques est toujours plus grand que celui des distances, une planete cinq fois plus éloignée du soleil, emploie à faire sa révolution douze fois plus de temps ou environ; ..." (... but according to the famous law of Kepler, which will be explained in the following book (para. 892), the ratio of the periods is always greater than that of the distances a planet five times farther from the sun, requires about twelve times or so more time to make its revolution ...)
    • From p. 429: "Les Quarrés des Temps périodiques sont comme les Cubes des Distances. 892. La plus fameuse loi du mouvement des planetes découverte par Kepler, est celle du repport qu'il y a entre les grandeurs de leurs orbites, & le temps qu'elles emploient à les parcourir; ..." (The squares of the periods are as the cubes of the distances. 892. The most famous law of the movement of the planets discovered by Kepler is that of the relation between the sizes of their orbits and the times that the require to traverse them; ...)
    • From p. 430: "Les Aires sont proportionnelles au Temps. 895. Cette loi générale du mouvement des planetes devenue si importante dans l'Astronomie, sçavior, que les aires sont proportionnelles au temps, est encore une des découvertes de Kepler; ..." (Areas are proportional to times. 895. This general law of the movement of the planets become so important in astronomy, namely, that areas are proportional to times, is one of Kepler's discoveries; ...)
    • From p. 435: "On a appellé cette loi des aires proportionnelles aux temps, Loi de Kepler, aussi bien que celle de l'article 892, du nome de ce célebre Inventeur; ..." (One called this law of areas proportional to times (the law of Kepler) as well as that of para. 892, by the name of that celebrated inventor; ... )
  9. Robert Small, An account of the astronomical discoveries of Kepler (London: J Mawman, 1804), pp. 298–299.
  10. Robert Small, An account of the astronomical discoveries of Kepler (London: J. Mawman, 1804).
  11. Bruce Stephenson (1994). Kepler's Physical Astronomy. Princeton University Press. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-691-03652-6.
  12. Astronomia nova Aitiologitis, seu Physica Coelestis tradita Commentariis de Motibus stellae Martis ex observationibus G.V. Tychnonis.Prague 1609; Engl. tr. W.H. Donahue, Cambridge 1992.
  13. In his Astronomia nova, Kepler presented only a proof that Mars' orbit is elliptical. Evidence that the other known planets' orbits are elliptical was presented only in 1621.
    See: Johannes Kepler, Astronomia nova ... (1609), p. 285. After having rejected circular and oval orbits, Kepler concluded that Mars' orbit must be elliptical. From the top of page 285: "Ergo ellipsis est Planetæ iter; ... " (Thus, an ellipse is the planet's path; ... ) Later on the same page: " ... ut sequenti capite patescet: ubi simul etiam demonstrabitur, nullam Planetæ relinqui figuram Orbitæ, præterquam perfecte ellipticam; ... " ( ... as will be revealed in the next chapter: where it will also then be proved that any figure of the planet's orbit must be relinquished, except a perfect ellipse; ... ) And then: "Caput LIX. Demonstratio, quod orbita Martis, ... , fiat perfecta ellipsis: ... " (Chapter 59. Proof that Mars' orbit, ... is a perfect ellipse: ... ) The geometric proof that Mars' orbit is an ellipse appears as Protheorema XI on pages 289–290.
    Kepler stated that every planet travels in elliptical orbits having the Sun at one focus in: Johannes Kepler, Epitome Astronomiae Copernicanae (Linz ("Lentiis ad Danubium"), (Austria): Johann Planck, 1622), book 5, part 1, III. De Figura Orbitæ (III. On the figure of orbits), pages 658–665. From p. 658: "Ellipsin fieri orbitam planetæ ... " (Of an ellipse is made a planet's orbit ... ). From p. 659: " ... Sole (Foco altero huius ellipsis) ... " ( ... the Sun (the other focus of this ellipse) ... ).
  14. ^ Holton, Gerald James; Brush, Stephen G. (2001). Physics, the Human Adventure: From Copernicus to Einstein and Beyond (3rd paperback ed.). Piscataway, NJ: Rutgers University Press. pp. 40–41. ISBN 978-0-8135-2908-0. Retrieved December 27, 2009.
  15. In his Astronomia nova ... (1609), Kepler did not present his second law in its modern form. He did that only in his Epitome of 1621. Furthermore, in 1609, he presented his second law in two different forms, which scholars call the "distance law" and the "area law".
    • His "distance law" is presented in: "Caput XXXII. Virtutem quam Planetam movet in circulum attenuari cum discessu a fonte." (Chapter 32. The force that moves a planet circularly weakens with distance from the source.) See: Johannes Kepler, Astronomia nova ... (1609), pp. 165–167. On page 167, Kepler states: " ... , quanto longior est αδ quam αε, tanto diutius moratur Planeta in certo aliquo arcui excentrici apud δ, quam in æquali arcu excentrici apud ε." ( ... , as αδ is longer than αε, so much longer will a planet remain on a certain arc of the eccentric near δ than on an equal arc of the eccentric near ε.) That is, the farther a planet is from the Sun (at the point α), the slower it moves along its orbit, so a radius from the Sun to a planet passes through equal areas in equal times. However, as Kepler presented it, his argument is accurate only for circles, not ellipses.
    • His "area law" is presented in: "Caput LIX. Demonstratio, quod orbita Martis, ... , fiat perfecta ellipsis: ... " (Chapter 59. Proof that Mars' orbit, ... , is a perfect ellipse: ... ), Protheorema XIV and XV, pp. 291–295. On the top p. 294, it reads: "Arcum ellipseos, cujus moras metitur area AKN, debere terminari in LK, ut sit AM." (The arc of the ellipse, of which the duration is delimited by the area AKM, should be terminated in LK, so that it is AM.) In other words, the time that Mars requires to move along an arc AM of its elliptical orbit is measured by the area of the segment AMN of the ellipse (where N is the position of the Sun), which in turn is proportional to the section AKN of the circle that encircles the ellipse and that is tangent to it. Therefore, the area that is swept out by a radius from the Sun to Mars as Mars moves along an arc of its elliptical orbit is proportional to the time that Mars requires to move along that arc. Thus, a radius from the Sun to Mars sweeps out equal areas in equal times.
    In 1621, Kepler restated his second law for any planet: Johannes Kepler, Epitome Astronomiae Copernicanae (Linz ("Lentiis ad Danubium"), (Austria): Johann Planck, 1622), book 5, page 668. From page 668: "Dictum quidem est in superioribus, divisa orbita in particulas minutissimas æquales: accrescete iis moras planetæ per eas, in proportione intervallorum inter eas & Solem." (It has been said above that, if the orbit of the planet is divided into the smallest equal parts, the times of the planet in them increase in the ratio of the distances between them and the sun.) That is, a planet's speed along its orbit is inversely proportional to its distance from the Sun. (The remainder of the paragraph makes clear that Kepler was referring to what is now called angular velocity.)
  16. ^ Johannes Kepler, Harmonices Mundi (Linz, (Austria): Johann Planck, 1619), book 5, chapter 3, p. 189. From the bottom of p. 189: "Sed res est certissima exactissimaque quod proportio qua est inter binorum quorumcunque Planetarum tempora periodica, sit præcise sesquialtera proportionis mediarum distantiarum, ... " (But it is absolutely certain and exact that the proportion between the periodic times of any two planets is precisely the sesquialternate proportion of their mean distances, ... ")
    An English translation of Kepler's Harmonices Mundi is available as: Johannes Kepler with E. J. Aiton, A. M. Duncan, and J. V. Field, trans., The Harmony of the World (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: American Philosophical Society, 1997); see especially p. 411.
  17. National Earth Science Teachers Association (9 October 2008). "Data Table for Planets and Dwarf Planets". Windows to the Universe. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  18. Mercator, Nicolaus (1664). Nicolai Mercatoris Hypothesis astronomica nova, et consensus eius cum observationibus [Nicolaus Mercator's new astronomical hypothesis, and its agreement with observations] (in Latin). London, England: Leybourn.
  19. Mercator, Nic. (25 March 1670). "Some considerations of Mr. Nic. Mercator, concerning the geometrick and direct method of signior Cassini for finding the apogees, excentricities, and anomalies of the planets; ...". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London (in Latin). 5 (57): 1168–1175. doi:10.1098/rstl.1670.0018. Mercator criticized Cassini's method of finding, from three observations, an orbit's line of apsides. Cassini had assumed (wrongly) that planets move uniformly along their elliptical orbits. From p. 1174: "Sed cum id Observationibus nequaquam congruere animadverteret, mutavit sententiam, & lineam veri motus Planetæ æqualibus temporibus æquales areas Ellipticas verrere professus est: ... " (But when he noticed that it didn't agree at all with observations, he changed his thinking, and he declared that a line a planet's true motion, sweeps out equal areas of an ellipse in equal periods of time: ... )
  20. Wilbur Applebaum (2000). Encyclopedia of the Scientific Revolution: From Copernicus to Newton. Routledge. p. 603. Bibcode:2000esrc.book.....A. ISBN 978-1-135-58255-5.
  21. Roy Porter (1992). The Scientific Revolution in National Context. Cambridge University Press. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-521-39699-8.
  22. Victor Guillemin; Shlomo Sternberg (2006). Variations on a Theme by Kepler. American Mathematical Soc. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-8218-4184-6.
  23. Bryant, Jeff; Pavlyk, Oleksandr. "Kepler's Second Law", Wolfram Demonstrations Project. Retrieved December 27, 2009.
  24. Holton, Gerald; Brush, Stephen (2001). Brush and Holton - Physics: the Human Adventure. Princeton University Press. pp. 42–43. ISBN 978-0813529080.
  25. Burtt, Edwin. The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Physical Science. p. 52.
  26. Gerald James Holton, Stephen G. Brush (2001). Physics, the Human Adventure. Rutgers University Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-8135-2908-0.
  27. Vijaya, G. K. (2019). "Original form of Kepler's Third Law and its misapplication in Propositions XXXII-XXXVII in Newton's Principia (Book I)". Heliyon. 5 (2): e01274. Bibcode:2019Heliy...501274V. doi:10.1016/j.heliyon.2019.e01274. PMC 6395789. PMID 30886926.
  28. Caspar, Max (1993). Kepler. New York: Dover. p. 304. ISBN 9780486676050.
  29. Caspar, Max (1993). Kepler. New York: Dover. p. 286. ISBN 9780486676050.
  30. I. Newton, Principia, p. 408 in the translation of I.B. Cohen and A. Whitman
  31. I. Newton, Principia, p. 943 in the translation of I.B. Cohen and A. Whitman
  32. Schwarz, René. "Memorandum № 1: Keplerian Orbit Elements → Cartesian State Vectors" (PDF). Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  33. Müller, M (1995). "Equation of Time – Problem in Astronomy". Acta Physica Polonica A. Retrieved 23 February 2013.

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