- Reduced mass
Reduced mass is the "effective"
inertial mass appearing in thetwo-body problem ofNewtonian mechanics . This is a quantity with the unit of mass, which allows the two-body problem to be solved as if it were a one-body problem. Note however that the mass determining the gravitational force is "not" reduced. In the computation one mass "can" be replaced by the reduced mass, if this is compensated by replacing the other mass by the sum of both masses.Given two bodies, one with mass and the other with mass , they will orbit the
barycenter of the two bodies. The equivalent one-body problem, with the position of one body with respect to the other as the unknown, is that of a single body of mass:
where the force on this mass is given by the gravitational force between the two bodies. This is just half the
harmonic mean of the two masses.This can be proven easily. Use
Newton's second law , the force exerted by body 2 on body 1 is:The force exerted by body 1 on body 2 is:
According to
Newton's third law , for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction::Therefore,:
and
:
The relative acceleration between the two bodies is given by:
So we conclude that body 1 moves with respect to the position of body 2 as a body of mass equal to the reduced mass.
The reduced mass is frequently denoted by the Greek letter
Applying the gravitational formula we get that the position of the first body with respect to the second is governed by the same differential equation as the position of a very small body orbiting a body with a mass equal to the sum of the two masses, because
:
The reduced mass is always less than or equal to the mass of each body.
"Reduced mass" may also refer more generally to an
algebraic term of the form:
that simplifies an equation of the form
:
The reduced mass is typically used as a relationship between two system elements in parallel, such as
resistors ; whether these be in the electrical, thermal, hydraulic, or mechanical domains. This relationship is determined by the physical properties of the elements as well as thecontinuity equation linking them.External links
* [http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/orbv.html#rm "Reduced Mass" on HyperPhysics]
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