The Problem again:
The number c of epicycle oscillations per orbit about a galactic center, is given by the ratio of the star’s epicycle frequency (ko) to its orbital angular speed, W.
Or: c = ko / W
a) Compute W for the Sun given that the Sun’s period around the galactic center is: 2 x 10 8 yrs.a) Assume
that the Sun moves in a nearly circular orbit about the galactic center with
the radius of orbit R = 104 parsecs. It then makes an entire orbital
revolution in 2 x 108 years.
T(s) = (2 x 10 8 yrs.) (365.25 days/yr.) (86,400 s/ day)
T(s)
= 6.3 x 10 15 s
Then: W = (2 π rad)/ T(s) = 2 π rad/ 6.3 x 10 15 s
W » 10 -15 rad s-1
(b) We know c = 1.35 and we have: c = ko / W . Thus the epicyclic frequency:
ko = 1.35 W =
1.35 (10 -15 rad s-1) = 1.35 x 10 -15 rad s-1
(c) Re-arrange the given expression:
m(W -
W L) = n ko
By deliberately choosing to have the Sun complete n orbits in the rotating frame of reference (while executing m epicycle oscillations) we can write:
W L = W - n ko / m = W - ko / 2
Therefore:
W L = 10 -15 rad s-1 - ½(1.35 x 10 -15 rad s-1 ) =
3.2
x 10 -16 rad s-1
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