Approximations in elliptical orbits

Ignoring that the derivation assumes a two body problem and Newtonian gravity, there's no approximation here. With these assumptions, a bound orbit of one body about another is an ellipse, with either body viewed as being fixed, and the fixed body being one of the foci of the ellipse.

This is of course a non-inertial perspective. The fixed body is accelerating toward the orbiting body. From the perspective of an inertial frame in which the center of mass is fixed rather than one of the bodies, both bodies are in elliptical orbits about the center of mass, with the center of mass being the common focus of the two ellipses.

To show that these are indeed equivalent, suppose we know that object B is orbiting the center of mass of a two-body system in an ellipse, with the center of mass at one of the two foci of the ellipse. This means that the polar coordinates of object B with the origin at the center of mass is $$\vec r_B = \frac {a_B (1-e^2)}{1+e \cos\theta} \,\,\hat r$$ where $a_B$ is the semi-major axis length of the orbit, $e$ is the eccentricity of the orbit, and $\theta$ is the angle on the orbital plane subtended by B's closest approach to the center of mass, the center of mass, and object B itself.

What about the other object? It's position in this center of mass system is constrained by $m_A \vec r_A = -m_B \vec r_B$. Thus it too moves in an ellipse with the center of mass as one of the foci: $$\vec r_A = \frac {a_A (1-e^2)}{1+e \cos\theta}(-\hat r)$$ where $a_A = \frac{m_B}{m_A} a_B$.

Finally, what about the displacement vector between the two? This is $$\vec r_B - \vec r_A = \left(1 + \frac {m_B}{m_A}\right) \frac {a_B(1-e^2)}{1+e\cos\theta} \,\, \hat r \equiv \frac {a(1-e^2)}{1+e\cos\theta}\,\,\hat r$$ where $a \equiv \frac{m_A+m_B}{m_A}a_B = \frac{m_A+m_B}{m_B}a_A$.

This is of course yet another ellipse. It can be looked at in two different ways: From the perspective of object $B$ orbiting a fixed object $A$, in which case object $A$ is at one of the foci of this ellipse, or from the perspective of object $A$ orbiting a fixed object $B$, in which case object $B$ is at one of the foci of this ellipse.


First, the fact that the planet has an elliptical orbit with the sun at one focus can be derived with no approximation. This is very well explained in David Hammen's answer. The reference frame which corresponds to this view is not inertial.

In the chapter 8 of Marion all dynamics are derived always from the center of mass frame. As you may already know, the problem of two bodies can be solved analytically, and this can be done by placing our inertial frame on the center of mass and working with the reduced mass $\mu$.

An approximation that is sometimes done is the following: as the sun is usually much more massive than the planet, you can take the approximation of placing the center of mass of the whole system on the center of the sun. As the mass of the sun $m_S$ is much bigger than the planet mass $m_P$ ($m_S >> m_P$), you can also take the approximation $\mu \approx m_P$. This is equivalent to consider the sun as an inertial frame. This means that usual mechanics ("inertial frame" mechanics) cannot be applied directly, but are a good approximation. If you want to solve exactly the dynamics of the system you must move to the center of mass and work from there with the reduced mass.

The total angular momentum is a conserved quantity of the total system because there's never an external torque $\tau=r \wedge F$ applied on the system. It doesn't matter which observer you are, the direction of force $F$ is always parallel to the position vector $r$, so $\tau=0$.

On the center of mass frame, the total linear momentum is conserved for the whole system, as there's no external force acting on it; but not for each of the bodies separately because gravity acts on each of them.

If you put your frame on the sun or on the planet (non inertial frames), then the linear momentum is no longer conserved, even for the whole system, because the only contribution comes from the planet, and that's not a conserved quantity.

Note: it is the center of mass of the sun which is moving in an elliptical orbit around the center of mass of the two bodies, as both are into the sun.