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I could theoretically achieve an escape of Earth's gravity well by only moving at 100 km per hour. If I was on a craft that could provide a
constant thrust against gravity that allows me to achieve 100 km per hour against that gravity for an indefinite amount of time (years of
continuous uninterrupted thrust), then I would eventually make it too the Moon while only moving at 100 km per hour.
Which is the principle behind the
Space Elevator
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By the way -- and sort of (but not directly) related to the topic -- the idea of "escape velocity" is sometimes misunderstood. Escape velocity is NOT
specifically the velocity a spacecraft needs in order to break free of the earth's gravitational well...
Actually, yes it is, but there's a catch.
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However, it does not take "escape velocity" speeds of 40,000 km/h (25,000 mph) to leave the Earth behind
The catch is that as gravity
decreases as the distance from the center-of-mass increases,
so does the escape velocity.
As a rule-of-thumb, escape velocity equals the circular orbit velocity at a given distance radius from the center-of-mass times the square-root of 2
(~1.4).
For example, an object in a circular orbit 200km above the Earth's equator would have an orbital velocity of ~28,024 km/hr. Escape velocity from that
altitude would be ~39,631 km/hr. Similarly, an object in geosynchronous orbit would have an orbital velocity of ~11,069 km/hr. Escape velocity from
that altitude would be ~15,654 km/hr. An object at the mean orbital distance of the Moon would have an orbital velocity of ~3,666 km/hr. Escape
velocity from that altitude would be ~5,184 km/hr.
Of course, you weren't talking about circular orbits, but rather moving straight upwards at 100 km/hr and ignoring any lateral motion. Fair enough.
Escape velocity for a given altitude remains the same. You are simply moving to higher altitudes where the escape velocity is lower. Let's ignore
the Earth's motion around the Sun - and the gravitational force of the Sun and the rest of the planets (and stars!) for that matter. At an altitude
of ~1,033,166,110 km above the Earth (somewhere out beyond Jupiter, which it took 1,178 years and 230 days to get to) the escape velocity falls below
100 km/hr. Beyond that, your elevator no longer needs to thrust. It will never return to Earth. Below that altitude, if you stop thrusting to
maintain 100 km/hr vertical speed relative to Earth, then you will eventually fall back to Earth (though it may take a a few quadrillion years),
hitting the atmosphere at ~40,000 km/hr.
We hope you enjoyed your ride...
ETA:
A useful siteedit on 15-4-2014 by Saint Exupery because: I added a link.