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  • We liveand stop me if I’m going too faston a planet.

  • I mean, sure, duh. But this isn’t the natural state of the Universe; or, at least, it’s

  • not the way things usually are. Most of the Universe is pretty emptythat’s why

  • we call itspace” — and if I were to magically transport you someplace randomly

  • in the cosmos, the chances are you’d be a million light years from the nearest substantial object.

  • Evolving on a planet has warped our sense of physics. If I throw an object away from

  • me, it comes back. That’s bizarre! It should just keep going, moving away from me at a

  • constant speed. Instead though it goes up, slows, stops, then falls back down toward me.

  • The difference between living on a planet and being in deep space is gravity. Gravity

  • from an object goes on forever, but it gets weaker rapidly with distance. A zillion light

  • years away, the Earth’s gravity is fantastically weak, but here on Earth it’s literally a force to be

  • reckoned with. And in some places it can be a lot stronger than what we experience right here.

  • For most of history, gravity was just a fact of life, neither understood nor examined terribly

  • closely. In the mid 1600s, scientists like Robert Hooke and Isaac Newton started investigating

  • it using mathin fact, the two men got into a bitter feud over who thought of what

  • first. But whoever it was who first got it right, now we have a much better understanding

  • of how gravity works.

  • One thing before we get to gravity. An important concept that comes up a lot is mass. It’s

  • a bit tricky to define, but you can think of it as how much stuff makes up an object.

  • I know, that’s not very scientific sounding, but it’s not a bad way to think about it.

  • Something with more mass has more stuff in it.

  • Size doesn’t really play into this; two objects can have the same mass but one can

  • be much larger than the other. In that case, the bigger object’s mass is more spread

  • out, so we say it has lower density, where density is how much mass is inside a given volume.

  • In science terms, mass tells us how much an object resists having its motion changed.

  • An object with more mass is harder to get moving than an object with less mass, which

  • is pretty obvious if youve ever tried pushing on a toy car versus a real truck. But mass

  • is also defined using gravity.

  • Everything that has mass also has gravity and can inflict this force on another object.

  • The amount of force you feel from the gravity of an object like a planet depends on three

  • things: How much mass it has, how much mass you have, and how far away you are from it.

  • In fact, distance dominates here; the force of gravity weakens with the square of the

  • distance. Double your distance from an object and the force of gravity drops by 2 x 2 = 4

  • times. Go 10 times farther away and the force drops by 10 x 10 = 100 times.

  • Gravity is also attractive: It can only draw things in, not repel them. But how it attracts

  • things is where it gets fun.

  • If I hold up a rock and let go of it, it falls to the ground. What might be hard to see is

  • that it gets faster the longer it drops. Forces accelerate objects, so the longer the force

  • acts, the more the object’s velocity changesin this case getting faster. If I drop

  • a rock from higher up, itll move faster when it hits the ground. Other forces act

  • on moving objects, as well, like friction and air resistance, counteracting gravity,

  • making this acceleration hard to see. But in space, the force of gravity becomes very clear.

  • Two objects that have mass will attract each other. If there are no other forces acting

  • on them, theyll accelerate toward each other until they meet. Remember, though, that

  • the force of gravity depends on those masses. If one is really massive, and the other not

  • so much, then in more practical terms the massive one will pull in the less massive

  • one. The more massive one does move, but much less than the other one.

  • When objects are free to move under the effects of gravity, we say they are in orbit. The

  • simplest kind of orbit may not be what you think: It’s actually just a line! When you

  • drop a rock, it’s very briefly in orbit. Ignoring things like the Earth’s rotation

  • (which adds a bit of sideways motion) it’s close enough to say the rock just falls straight

  • down, and is stopped because the Earth itself gets in the way.

  • That’s not a terribly interesting orbit! So what if, instead of dropping the rock,

  • we throw it? That gives it a little bit of sideways motion, so instead of hitting the

  • ground at my feet, it hits a bit farther away. If I throw it harder, it moves horizontally

  • even more before it hits.

  • What if I throw it really hard?

  • This is where Newton’s genius comes in. He realized that if you throw the ball hard

  • enough sideways, it will fall at the exact same rate the Earth would curve away underneath

  • it. As Douglas Adams said inHitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy,” flying is just falling

  • and missing the ground. It turns out, that’s exactly what orbiting is, too.

  • A rock thrown hard enough sideways will fall toward the Earth, but always miss it, going

  • instead into a circular path around it, guided only by gravity. It will orbit the Earth in

  • a circle, taking about 90 minutes to go around the planet once.

  • Circles are simple orbits. The speed at which the orbiting satellite travels depends on

  • the mass of the object it’s orbiting, and its distance from it. The farther it is, the

  • weaker gravity is, so it doesn’t have to travel as quickly to maintain the orbit.

  • Roughly 400 years ago, the astronomer Johannes Kepler realized that there can be other shapes

  • of orbits as well. He discovered the planets orbit the Sun on ellipses, when previously

  • it was thought they orbited in perfect circles. An elliptical orbit happens when you throw

  • the rock sideways even harder than it takes for a circular orbit; it goes up higher on

  • one end of the orbit than on the other.

  • In fact, the harder you throw the rock, the more elongated the orbit gets. An orbit like

  • this is still closed; that is, the orbit repeats itself and the rock is still bound to the

  • Earth by gravity. At some point, though if you throw the rock hard enough, an amazing

  • thing happens: It can escape.

  • Remember, gravity gets weaker with distance. If you throw a rock hard enough, while gravity

  • can slow it down, the gravity gets weaker the farther away the rock is. If the rock

  • has enough velocity, gravity weakens too quickly to stop it. The rock can escape, moving away

  • forever, so we call this the escape velocity.

  • The escape velocity of an object like a planet or star depends on how much mass it has and

  • how big it is. For the Earth, that turns out to be about 11 kilometers per secondfor

  • Jupiter, it’s about 58 kilometers per second, and for the Sun it’s a whopping 600 kilometers

  • per second. Whatever the particular escape velocity for your cosmic location is, if you

  • fling a rock away from it faster than that, I hope you kissed it goodbye first, ‘cause

  • it ain’t coming back. One way to think of it is that the rock is always slowing, getting

  • ever closer to stopping, but it never actually stops. If it could travel infinitely far away,

  • it would stop, but that’s kind of a long trip.

  • This works in reverse, too. If I go way far away from the Earth and drop a rock, itll

  • accelerate. When it hits the planet itll be moving at escape velocity, that same 11

  • kilometers per second. And if I give it a little sideways kick, itll miss the Earth

  • but still pass us at escape velocity. An escape orbit is openit doesn’t come backand

  • is shaped like a parabola.

  • What if you throw the rock even harder than that? The rock doesn’t come back, and moves

  • away even faster. The orbit is now a hyperbola, which is similar to a parabola, but is even

  • more open. The rock never stops, even at infinity. It just keeps movinon.

  • Like all forces, gravity gets weaker with distance. But its force never quite drops

  • to zero; it just gets smaller and smaller as you get farther and farther away.

  • So why then are astronauts on the space stationweightless”?

  • Gravity is still pulling on the astronauts! In fact, at the height of the station, Earth’s

  • gravity has only decreased by a little bit; it’s still about 90% as strong as it is

  • on the Earth’s surface. If they were in a tower 320 kilometers high they’d weigh

  • 90% of what they do on the Earth’s surface. But the big difference is that the astronauts

  • are in orbit, falling around the Earth. Weight is actually not just the force of gravity

  • on a mass, but how hard a surface pushes back on that mass. For example, when you stand

  • on the ground, the ground pushes back. Otherwise you’d fall through! The force of the ground

  • back on you is what causes you to have weight.

  • In free fall, there’s nothing pushing back. Youre falling freely, and so you have no

  • weight. NASA likes to call this conditionmicrogravity,” since there are subtle

  • forces acting on you.

  • This actually highlights the difference between mass and weight. In space you have the same

  • mass as you do on Earth, but no weight. If another astronaut pushed on you they’d have

  • to exert a force, but if you stood on a scale in space it wouldn’t register anything.

  • Space is weird. Well, compared to Earth.

  • One more thing, and this is truly weird: Photons, particles of light, have no mass, yet they

  • can be affected by gravity, too, bending their direction of flight as they pass a massive

  • object! It turns out gravity can actually warp space! Light travels along the fabric

  • of space like a truck on the road, and if the road curves, so does the truck. I know

  • this is an odd concept, and well be dealing with it later in more detail when we push

  • escape velocity to its limitswith black holes.

  • Today you learned that gravity is a force, and everything with mass has gravity. Gravity

  • accelerates object, changing their speed and/or direction. An object moving along a path controlled

  • by gravity is said to be in orbit, and there are many different kinds: straight lines,

  • circles, ellipses, parabolae, and hyperbolae. You can’t ever escape gravity, but if you

  • travel faster than escape velocity for an object youll get away from it without falling

  • back. And if youre in orbit, in freefall, you have no weight, but you still have mass.

  • This episode is brought to you by Squarespace. The latest version of their platform, Squarespace

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  • Start Here. Go Anywhere.

  • Crash Course Astronomy is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios, and you can head

  • over to their channel and find more awesome videos. This episode was written by me, Phil

  • Plait. The script was edited by Blake de Pastino, and our consultant is Dr. Michelle Thaller.

  • It was co-directed by Nicholas Jenkins, and Michael Aranda, edited by Nicole Sweeney,

  • and the graphics team is Thought Café.

We liveand stop me if I’m going too faston a planet.

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