On Apollo Moon missions, the lunar module would blast off from the Moon\'s surfa
ID: 1784374 • Letter: O
Question
On Apollo Moon missions, the lunar module would blast off from the Moon's surface and dock with the command module in lunar orbit. After docking, the lunar module would be jettisoned and allowed to crash back onto the lunar surface. Seismometers placed on the Moon's surface by the astronauts would then pick up the resulting seismic waves.Find the impact speed of the lunar module, given that it is jettisoned from an orbit 110 km above the lunar surface moving with a speed of 1600 m/s. The answer is in m/s. Please show all work.
Explanation / Answer
We can use conservation of energy to find the crash speed ...Let K = kinetic energy = 1/2*m*v^2 & U is potential energy = -GMm/r The mass of the moon is 7.36x10^22kg and its radius is 1738 km
So (K + U) orbit = (K + U)crash
So 1/2*m*vo^2 - GMm/(1738000 + 110000) = 1/2*m*vc^2 - GMm/1738000. Note mass drops out leaving
vo^2/2 - GM/1848000 = vc^2/2 - GM/1738000
solving for vc we get vc = sqrt(vo^2 +2*GM*(1/1738000 - 1/1848000)) =
vc = sqrt(1600^2 +2*6.67x10^-11*7.36x10^22*(1/1738000- 1/1848000)) =
So vc = 1701.84 m/s
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