Radius of 'n'th orbit of hydrogen like species of atomic no.'z'
Neptune's orbit has a mean radius of 30 AUs. The Earth's orbit has a mean radius of 1 AU, which is how an AU is defined, so 1 AU is much smaller than Neptune's orbit.
It depends on the radius of the orbit. Different orbit radii have different orbital periods. As an example, one of Mars's natural satellites, Phobos takes 7.66 hours to orbit Mars. It's orbital radius is around 9,400 km.
1.058
near the radius at which they orbit today
Radius of 'n'th orbit of hydrogen like species of atomic no.'z'
The radius is the distance from the center of the circle to its edge. No matter how you draw this radius, it is one value of one length only, for any given circle.
you cant: pi is the same for any circle - 3.1415... the diamter or the radius has to be given diameter divided by two equals the radius the radius times two equals the diameter
The orbit of the Earth has a radius of about 93 million miles.
For any given circle, the circumference is equal to the radius multiplied by 2 x pi.
An orbit.
An orbit is made possible by an equilibrium, or balance, of forces. Typically, this involves two forces: one of gravitational attraction between the objects and another caused by centripetal acceleration. At a given radius of orbit, a velocity can be found such that these two forces are equal, keeping the object in orbit.
Do you mean the length of such an orbit ?Well . . .-- The radius of the Earth is about 3,960 miles.-- 220 miles further out means that the radius of the orbit is 4,180 miles.-- The circumference of a circle is (2 pi) x (the radius).-- So the length of the orbit is (8,360 pi) = 26,264 miles. (rounded)
Neptune's orbit has a mean radius of 30 AUs. The Earth's orbit has a mean radius of 1 AU, which is how an AU is defined, so 1 AU is much smaller than Neptune's orbit.
152.98 (rounded to 2 d.p) I haven't included units as I haven't been given any but they would be the same units as the units given for the radius.
It depends on the radius of the orbit. Different orbit radii have different orbital periods. As an example, one of Mars's natural satellites, Phobos takes 7.66 hours to orbit Mars. It's orbital radius is around 9,400 km.
I guess you mean:"How do you find the radius if you are given the diameter?"You take the diameter and divide it by 2.