Kepler's laws describe the motion of planets around the sun. The first law states that planets orbit in ellipses with the sun at one focus. The second law says that a line connecting a planet to the sun sweeps out equal areas in equal times. The third law establishes a relationship between a planet's orbital period and its average distance from the sun, where the period squared is proportional to the cube of the semimajor axis.
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Kepler laws
1. Kepler's First Law or The Law of Ellipses
An ellipse is a closed, curved shape that is defined by two foci
While the Earth makes a big circuit each year, the Sun also makes, a very small one, around the Sun-Earth center of gravity.
The long one is called the major axis, and the short one is called the minor axis
The shape of an ellipse is measured by its eccentricity
Eccentricity can be from 0 ( a circle) to .95 (almost a line)
2. Kepler's Second Law or The Equal Areas Law
The motion this law describes also tells us that the average distance from a planet to the Sun is equal to the length of the semimajo
axis
The line connecting the Sun to a planet sweeps
equal areas in equal times.
although the orbit is symmetric, the motion is not. A planet speeds up as it approaches the Sun, gets its greatest velocity when
passing closest, then slows down again.
If the orbit were exactly a circle (in which case what we call "long axis would be completely arbitrary, a diameter no different from
any other), then by Kepler's 2nd law, the Earth would move at a constant speed and spend equal times in the summer half and the
winter half of the year. Actually, it spends about 2 days fewer in the winter half!
But the axis of the Earth moves around a cone, in about 26000 years. In 13,000 years we will be closest to the Sun in midsummer,
and climate will get harsher.
3. Kepler's Third Law: The Harmonic Law
a relation between the time of a planet's orbit and its distance from the Sun:
The squares of the orbital periods of the planets around the Sun are proportional to the cubes of the orbital semimajor axes.
or
P =a
2 3
Where P is the orbital
period in Earth years and
a is the length of the
semimajor axis (average
distance from the Sun) in
Astronomical Units.