A satellite is in a circular orbit about the earth (ME = 5.98 1024 kg). The period of the satellite is 2.60 104 s. What is the speed at which the satellite travels?

T = orbital period in seconds

µ = Earth's gravitational constant = 3.98x10^14
r = radius of orbit in meters

From T = 2(Pi)sqrt[r^3/µ] r = 18,959.3m.
From V = sqrt[µ/r], V = 4581m/s

To find the speed at which the satellite travels, we can use the formula for the circumference of a circle, which is given by:

C = 2πr

where C is the circumference and r is the radius of the circle.

In this case, since the satellite is in a circular orbit around the Earth, the radius of the circle is equal to the distance between the center of the Earth and the satellite.

The formula for the period of a satellite in a circular orbit is given by:

T = 2π√(r³/GMe)

where T is the period, r is the radius, G is the gravitational constant (6.67430 × 10^-11 m^3 kg^-1 s^-2), and Me is the mass of the Earth.

We can rearrange this formula to solve for the radius:

r = (GT²Me / 4π²)^(1/3)

Once we have the radius, we can calculate the circumference using the first formula, and then divide by the period to find the speed:

v = C / T

Now let's plug in the given values and calculate the speed of the satellite.

1. Calculate the radius:
r = ((6.67430 × 10^-11 m^3 kg^-1 s^-2) × (2.60 × 10^4 s)^2 × (5.98 × 10^24 kg) / (4π²))^(1/3)

2. Calculate the circumference:
C = 2πr

3. Calculate the speed:
v = C / T

By plugging these values into a calculator, we can find the speed at which the satellite travels.