Kepler’s Second Law says that when a planet moves around the Sun, it speeds up when it's close and slows down when it's far away, like riding a swing!
Imagine you're on a swing. When you're near the bottom of your arc, you go super fast, that’s like a planet being close to the Sun. But when you’re at the top, you slow down, just like a planet moving farther from the Sun.
Why It Happens
The reason this happens is because of gravity. The closer a planet is to the Sun, the stronger gravity pulls it in, kind of like how your feet feel heavy when you're close to the ground, but light when you jump high!
Think of it like a game of tug-of-war: When the planet is near the Sun, the pull is stronger, and the planet zips around faster. But as it moves away, gravity’s not so strong anymore, it’s like being pulled by a smaller team in the game.
A Simple Rule
Kepler's Second Law gives us a rule: a line from the Sun to the planet sweeps out equal areas in equal time. So even though the speed changes, the "amount of space covered" stays the same every certain amount of time, like how you cover the same distance on each swing cycle, no matter how high or low you go!
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See also
- What Causes a Volcano to Erupt?
- How Does a Battery Work?
- What Causes the Tides Exactly?
- How To Use An Abacus?
- Why Do We Have Different Seasons?