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7. Kepler’s Third Law of Orbital Motion states that you can approximate the period P (in Earth years) it takes a planet to complete one orbit of the sun using the function , where d is the distance (in astronomical units, AU) from the planet to the sun. How many Earth years would it take for a planet that is 6.76 AU from the sun? 15.23

17.58
154.46
3.58

User Senad
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2 Answers

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In your question, this function is supposed to be in the little space after the word "function":

(square of the orbital period) = k · (cube of the distance from the sun)

' k ' is the same number for every solar-system object

To answer the question, we first have to find out what ' k ' is. Since it's the same number for every planet in our solar system, we can find ' k ' for the Earth, and then use it for the mystery planet.

Period = 1 Earth year

Distance = 1 Astronomical unit

P² = k · D³

1² = k · 1³

k = 1

Now for the mystery planet:

P² = k · D³

P² = 1 · (6.76)³

P² = 308.9 Earth years²

P = √308.9

P = 17.58 Earth years

User Running Rabbit
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8.3k points
5 votes

Answer: The planet will take 17.58 earth years

Step-by-step explanation:

Mass of the sun = 1 Solar

Time period of planet = T

Distance between the earth and planet = 6.67 AU

G = gravitation constant =
39.478 AU^3 y^(-2) MS^(-1)

Using Kepler's third law:


T^2=(4\pi^2)/(G M_(sun))* r^3


T^2=(4* 3.14* 3.14)/(39.478 AU^3 y^(-2) MS^(-1)* 1 MS)* (6.76 AU)^3


T^2=308.605 y^2

T = 17.567156 years

The closest answer from the option is 17.58 years

User Payam Shakibafar
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