Lesson .
.Solar System Scroll
Overview
One of the most persistent misconceptions for students (and even adults) is just how much space is in space! Our solar system is often depicted as a bunch of planets equidistant from one another, always in a straight line. However, as seen in this activity, the relative distance between planets doesn’t fit very well on a single page.
In this activity, students will predict the scale of our solar system and the distance between planets, then check their answers using fractions.
Materials
- Roll of accounting paper or toilet paper
- Markers
Management
- Because the activity uses relative distance and fractions, the length of each piece of paper isn’t critical. However, one “wingspan” (the length from fingertips to fingertips, if you’re spreading your arms apart) is usually a good length so that students don’t feel too crowded while making their predictions.
- Try using colored pencils and markers for students’ guesses. Then, once the correct locations are discussed, use something bolder, such as a black marker, to be able to quickly see the predictions versus the correct placements of each planet.
Background
One of the common misconceptions people have about our solar system has to do with the relative distances between the planets.
Think about whenever you’ve seen our solar system represented in textbooks or images: The planets are always aligned, as if in some kind of multi-planet eclipse, and they are all equally spaced apart. Yet the truth is that the planets are not in a straight line and the distance between planets is very different. For example, the average distance between Earth and Mars, our neighboring planet, is around 225 million kilometers, while the distance to our next-nearest planet, Jupiter, is roughly 630 million kilometers. And as we get farther away from the Sun, those distances can really add up!
As a result, when we send spacecraft to planets like Saturn, we end up having to traverse vast expanses of empty space to get there. This is why so few spacecraft have gone to the outer planets and beyond.
Procedures
Discussion
- Ask students what surprised them about their guesses versus the actual scale of the solar system?
- We split our solar system into two groups: the inner and outer planets. Discuss how these are broken down and where, in students' models, that split begins
- Aside from inner and outer planets, we have another name for these groups, based on their physical properties. Ask students what they know about the makeup of inner planets versus outer planets that could be used to distinguish them.
- Some planets are closer to Earth, but small, while others are larger but farther away. Which do students think they could easily see in the night sky?
Extensions
About the Author
Brandon Rodriguez
Educator Professional Development Specialist, NASA-JPL Education Office
Lesson Last Updated: Nov. 5, 2024