Suppose a force pushes/pulls Earth straightly toward Sun and make earth x kilometers closer/farther from Sun. For what x the Earth remains in a stable orbit, rather than spirally fall to the Sun or going farther away? What math is involved?
Answer
For the Sun-Earth system alone, the important quantity here is the effective gravitational potential Ueff=ℓ22mr2−GmMr with m the mass of Earth and M the mass of the Sun, and ℓ is the angular momentum of the Earth about the Sun. Since the orbit of the Earth is basically circular we can take r to be r=R0=149600×106m to be the average distance to the Sun, and estimate ℓ=mvr=m×29.78×103×R0≈2.66×1037 The energy scale U0 can be set using U0=|Ueff(r=R0)|, so that plotting Ueff/U0 as a function of ρ=r/R0 gives the graph below.
The minimum of this potential, which is the radius where the orbit is circular, of course occurs at ρ=1 and Ueff/U0=−1. If you "push" the Earth a bit towards the Sun, the Earth will oscillate about two radial turning points that will define the minimum and maximum radius of the elliptical orbits. For instance, if you push the Earth (keeping ℓ constant) so that Ueff/U0=−3/4, the radius would oscillate between ρmin≈0.67 and ρmax≈2.0.
The orbit remains bound as long at the total energy remains negative. You can reach the threshold ρc by solving for ρ when you set Ueff=0. This gives ρc≈1/2. Thus, if you pushed the Earth to a radius smaller than one half of it's current average radius (managing v so that ℓ would remain constant), the orbit would become unbound.
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