Starter track
Step 4 of 50 / 5 completeGravity and Orbits
Earlier steps still set up Kepler's Third Law and Orbital Periods.
Previous step: Circular Orbits and Orbital Speed.
Concept module
Compare circular orbits around one source mass and see why larger orbits take longer: the path is longer, the circular speed is lower, and the same live model makes the period law visible without hiding the gravity-speed link.
Interactive lab
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Progress
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Stable links
Starter track
Step 4 of 50 / 5 completeEarlier steps still set up Kepler's Third Law and Orbital Periods.
Previous step: Circular Orbits and Orbital Speed.
Why it behaves this way
Kepler's third law is the timing view of the same circular-orbit balance you already met in the speed story. Around one source mass, larger circular orbits take longer because they have farther to travel and because the allowed circular speed is lower at larger radius.
This bounded lab keeps one source mass, one chosen reference orbit, one speed factor, one live path, and the linked radius, speed, and acceleration-balance graphs tied to the same state. That makes the period law honest: it is not a disconnected astronomy rule, but the time consequence of gravity setting the circular speed.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans4 kg
1.4 m
1. Start from the circular speed
2. Turn speed into one full-orbit time
3. Compute the live circular period
Current circular period
Kepler checkpoint
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Common misconception
A larger orbit takes longer only because the object has farther to go around, while the orbital speed stays about the same.
The path is longer, but that is only half of the story. The circular speed is also lower at larger radius because gravity is weaker there.
That combination is why the period grows strongly with radius: the object travels farther and it does so more slowly.
Quick test
Reasoning
Question 1 of 4
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows one fixed source mass at the center, a moving satellite launched from the right side of a chosen circular reference radius, and optional overlays for the dashed reference orbit, the live radius line, the tangent velocity vector, the inward gravity vector, and the trajectory trail.
Changing source mass, reference orbit radius, or speed factor updates the same orbit path, circular-speed readout, circular-period readout, law-ratio readout, and linked graphs together. Compare mode overlays a second setup without switching to a separate orbit model.
The displayed units use a bounded one-source gravity model with . A minimum sample radius keeps the stage and graphs finite and readable while preserving the correct inward and inverse-square trends.
Graph summary
The radius-history graph compares the live radius with the chosen circular reference radius over time so you can tell whether the path is still the circular case.
The speed-history graph compares the live speed with the circular speed required at the current radius, and the acceleration-balance graph compares gravity with the turning requirement on that same live path.
Keep the orbit-timing story moving
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Launch outward from one bounded gravity source and see how source mass, launch radius, and total specific energy decide whether the object escapes or eventually returns.
See one source mass create a negative potential well, compare how potential and potential energy change with distance, and connect the downhill slope of phi to the gravitational field on the same live model.
See why a circular orbit needs the right sideways speed, how gravity supplies the centripetal acceleration, and how source mass and radius together set orbital speed and period on one bounded live model.