Everyone knows Middle Path is less than one mile long, but what if it were scaled up to 2.8 billion miles | Kenyon College
Everyone knows Middle Path is less than one mile long, but what if it were scaled up to 2.8 billion miles | Kenyon College
Everyone knows Middle Path is less than one mile long, but what if it were scaled up to 2.8 billion miles? That’s what a group of physics faculty and students envisioned while designing a solar system visualization project for Kenyon’s Radio and Optical Astronomy Research (ROAR) group.
Using Old Kenyon as the Sun, eight scale models of planets were stationed at appropriate points along Middle Path, with Neptune passing by Bexley Hall as part of its orbit. (To make the planets more visible, the models were built on a different scale, exaggerating their size by a factor of 27 relative to the distances between them.)
“Visualizing the vastly different scales of our solar system is often hard to do without a tangible reference,” said Associate Professor of Physics Madeline Wade, who undertook the project with support from a National Science Foundation grant. “This exhibit gives folks that tangible reference. We have also included information about the individual planets on the signs, so viewers can also learn about some of the differences and neat facts about the planets.”
Original source can be found here