Kepler's three laws of planetary motion were a stunning development in human intellectual history. This second edition is a concise, self-contained treatment of Kepler/Newton planetary orbits at the level of an advanced undergraduate physics student. New to this edition are elements such as a detailed derivation of Newton's shell-point equivalency theorem, a revised derivation of the polar equation for an ellipse, Kepler's Third Law for non-inverse-square central potentials, a chapter on transfer and rendezvous orbits, and an expanded treatment of methods of calculating the average distance between the Sun and a planet. The approach is student-friendly, featuring brief sections, clear notation and diagrams, and mathematics that undergraduates will be comfortable with, accompanied by numerous exercises.
Key Features
- Provides a compact, self-contained treatment of a universally interesting topic
- Contains brief sections, with emphasis put on clear first-principles discussions of the interpretations of calculations and expressions
- Student-friendly, with numerous worked examples, clear notation, and exercises
- Sets a solid foundation for more advanced studies of phenomena such as orbital perturbations, precession, and unbound orbits