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  1. Mar 31, 2015 · The solar system planets, mercury, venus, earth, mars, jupiter... Today we’re going to learn about the Solar System. As you know, the Sun is a star, one of the many stars that form the Milky Way...

    • 3 min
    • 1.7M
    • Happy Learning English
  2. How we’ve defined what a planet is has changed over time. Is Pluto a planet? Is Ceres? Find out the difference between a planet and a dwarf planet and why sc...

    • 5 min
    • 8.3K
    • Science Trek
  3. In Planets in the Solar System for Kids, you will learn lots of cool facts about the sun and the planets that orbit it. A solar system includes a star and the planets and other space objects...

    • 11 min
    • 1.8M
    • Learn Bright
  4. Activity 1: Solar System Model (Distance) Step 4: Talk about your model Now that kids have an idea of the relative distance between planets, what do they think? Ask kids: • Why is it important to know these distances? • Who is it important to? • How do the distances between planets get measured?

    • 414KB
    • 6
    • Introduction
    • Materials
    • What Happened?
    • Digging Deeper
    • For Further Exploration
    • Related Resources

    Did you know that the Voyager 2 spacecraft took 12 years to travel from Earth to Neptune, the furthest planet in the solar system? This sounds like a really long time! Maybe not that long if you consider what distance the spacecraft had to travel to get from Earth to Neptune. In this activity, you will make a model of the planets in the solar syste...

    Yarn, if possible, in up to 8 different colors
    Measuring tape
    Thumbtack
    Two pieces of cardboard, about 6 cm by 6 cm each

    You probably noticed how the four planets closest to the Sun (Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars) are all much closer to the Sun (at 4, 7, 10, and 15 cm from the Sun in your model) compared to the other four planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune). These last four are much more spread out (at 50, 95, 190, and 300 cm from the Sun in your model)....

    Planets are celestial bodies that orbit (or circle around) a star. In our planetary system, this star is the Sun. Planets are not self-luminous, they do not emit light like the stars, but they can be seen in the sky because they reflect light emitted by other celestial objects. The Solar System is the system of objects that orbit the Sun directly o...

    Let your planets circle around the Sun at different speeds and see what happens to their relative positions.
    Calculate how small the planets would need to be to represent them accurately in your shrunken model. You can find the necessary information on the Solar Planet Data Sheet.
    Make a second model that accurately represents the different sizes of the planets in the solar system. One way to do this is explained in the How Big Are the Planets in Our Solar System?activity.
    Measure the distances between planets, example between Earth and Neptune. In what position on their orbit do the planets need to be for the distance to be the shortest possible, and in what positio...

    Links

    1. NASA: Solar System Overview 2. National Geographic: Watch This Guy Build a Massive Solar System in the Desert

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  5. Jun 16, 2023 · Use these free STEM projects, lessons, and activities to help students get hands-on exploring and learning about solar system science. The Earth, the Moon, the Sun, and space are concepts students identify early on.

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  7. Explain the constant force of gravity and how it differs from one planet to another. In more advanced sessions it could be used to illustrate the difference between mass and weight.