Escape Velocity

Overview

Escape velocity is the minimum speed an object must have at a given position in a gravitational field so that it can move infinitely far away without further propulsion and arrive at infinity with zero final speed.

It follows from conservation of mechanical energy.

Applications include:

  • rockets leaving Earth permanently,
  • spacecraft transfer missions,
  • gas molecules escaping atmospheres,
  • understanding gravitational binding.

This topic connects:

Why It Matters

Escape velocity is an energy benchmark. It clarifies that escape is controlled by total mechanical energy, not simply by the size of the instantaneous gravitational force.

It also links:

  • gravitational potential energy,
  • conservation of mechanical energy,
  • orbital speed,
  • atmospheric retention,
  • satellite and spacecraft motion.

Definition

Escape velocity is the minimum launch speed required for an object to escape permanently from a body’s gravitational field, neglecting air resistance and further thrust.

If the initial speed is too small, the object rises, slows down, stops, and falls back. If the initial speed equals escape velocity, it reaches infinity with final speed zero. If the initial speed exceeds escape velocity, it escapes with remaining speed.

Key Representations

Core Idea

To escape permanently, an object must have enough initial kinetic energy to overcome gravitational attraction.

If launch speed is:

  • less than escape velocity: rises, slows, returns.
  • equal to escape velocity: reaches infinity with zero speed.
  • greater than escape velocity: escapes with remaining speed.

Thus escape velocity is an energy threshold, not simply a force condition.

Derivation Using Energy Conservation

Consider an object of mass launched from distance from the centre of a planet of mass .

Initial Energy

Kinetic energy:

Gravitational potential energy:

Total initial energy:

Final Energy at Infinity

At infinity:

For minimum escape:

Hence:

Apply Conservation of Energy

So:

Cancel :

General Formula at Distance r

If launched from distance from the centre:

For launch height above a planet of radius :

Thus:

Higher starting position gives smaller escape velocity.

Important Result: Independent of Mass

Escape velocity does not depend on the mass of the launched object.

So:

  • a pebble,
  • a rocket,
  • a satellite,

all require the same ideal escape speed from the same location (ignoring drag and thrust profile).

Earth Escape Velocity

For Earth:

Hence:

or:

Escape Velocity vs Orbital Speed

Circular orbital speed at radius :

Escape speed:

Therefore:

Escape speed is greater than circular orbital speed at the same radius.

Energy Interpretation

Total mechanical energy:

If

Object is gravitationally bound.

If

Object just escapes.

If

Object escapes with residual speed.

This is a common conceptual exam point.

Why Rockets Do Not Need Instant 11.2 km s^-1 Upward Launch

Real rockets:

  • provide thrust continuously,
  • gain height gradually,
  • may first enter orbit,
  • later perform transfer burns.

Therefore real launches do not require an instantaneous vertical launch speed of .

Escape velocity is an ideal benchmark from energy theory.

Assumptions in Standard Formula

The formula assumes:

  • no air resistance,
  • no further thrust after launch,
  • no energy losses,
  • no planetary rotation effects,
  • isolated gravitational system.

Real launches need more energy because of drag, steering losses, and gravity losses during ascent.

Planet Comparisons

Moon

Smaller mass gives smaller escape speed:

Jupiter

Much larger mass gives much larger escape speed.

Atmosphere Retention

Gas molecules have random thermal speeds.

If molecular speeds are comparable to escape speed, gas can gradually escape.

This helps explain why:

  • Moon has almost no atmosphere,
  • Earth retains heavier gases,
  • giant planets retain light gases more easily.

Worked Example 1: Escape Speed from Earth

Use:

Substituting Earth values gives:

Worked Example 2: Compare Two Planets

Planet A has same radius as Planet B but four times the mass.

Since:

Then:

Planet A has twice the escape speed.

Worked Example 3: Escape from Height

A rocket starts from height above Earth.

Use:

Then:

If:

where is speed of light, then even light cannot escape.

Setting:

gives:

This is beyond core H2 syllabus.

Common Exam Pitfalls

1. Using Height Instead of Centre Distance

Wrong: use directly.

Correct:

2. Forgetting Potential Energy Is Negative

3. Thinking Escape Means Gravity Is Zero

Gravity acts at all finite distances.

4. Thinking Heavier Objects Need Larger Escape Speed

Mass cancels.

5. Confusing Escape Speed with Orbital Speed

Problem-Solving Strategy

If Asked for Escape Speed

Use:

If Asked Whether Object Escapes

Calculate:

  • no escape
  • just escapes
  • escapes

If Asked Final Speed at Infinity

Use:

Summary

Core equations:

At surface:

Relation to orbital speed:

Escape velocity is the minimum speed required so that total mechanical energy reaches zero, allowing permanent escape from a gravitational field.