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Galaxies and the Universe • H4 The Birdseed Galaxy Activity H4 Grade Level: 6–12 Source: This activity was written by Marni Berendsen for the Night Sky Network project at the Astronomical Society of the Pacific and adapted for the classroom by Andrew Fraknoi. This version is © 2010 by the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. http://www.astrosociety.org Permission to use for any nonprofit educational purpose (such as using it in one classroom) is freely granted. For any other use, please contact the Society. What’s This Activity About? Tips and Suggestions One of the hardest ideas for people to grasp is how vast the Milky Way Galaxy is — how overwhelming its general size, shape, and organization is, and how small our place in it turns out to be. This activity gives you some simple tools to convey an understanding of these difficult concepts. • The results of this activity are hard for students to absorb the first time they hear them, so be sure there is some time set aside for discussion. • Other activities which involve counting and estimating the number of stars are G6, H3 and H6 on The Universe at Your Fingertips disk. • If you would like to show images of other spiral galaxies to the group, two places to find them are: http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/images/ galaxy/spiral/ http://www.noao.edu/image_gallery/spiral_ galaxies.html What Will Students Do? Students are given a scale factor, in which our solar system is about the size of their palm (or the size of two quarters side by side). They have to estimate the size of the Galaxy and then using a bird seed as the analog for a star, estimate both how large a space 200 billion bird seeds would take up (if rolled together) and how they would be distributed in their scale model Galaxy. What Will Students Learn? Concepts Inquiry Skills Big Ideas • Milky Way Galaxy • Cosmic Scale • Number of stars • Modeling • Comparing • Imagining • Measuring • Inferring • Describing • Visualizing • Scale and structure • Models and simulations The Universe at Your Fingertips • Astronomical Society of the Pacific Page 1 H4 • The Birdseed Galaxy Galaxies and the Universe The Birdseed Galaxy: A Scale Model of our Milky Way by Marni Berendsen (Astronomical Society of the Pacific) O ne of the hardest ideas for people to grasp is how vast the Milky Way Galaxy is — how overwhelming its general size, shape, and organization is, and how small our place in it turns out to be. This activity gives you some simple tools to convey an understanding of these difficult concepts. It concentrates on our own Milky Way Galaxy and the objects visible within it. When we say that the Orion Nebula is 1600 light years away or Polaris is 430 light years away, this really means very little to students and audiences because they have no standard by which to imagine how far this is. This activity provides you with such a way of seeing relative distances within our Galaxy. Materials you will want to have: • Two quarters • A package of bird seed, available in any pet store. Divide the birdseed into smaller packages, so that each student group can have some. (Milo birdseed, which is more round in shape, is especially useful.) • Paper and pencil for participants to make their estimates on Terms you will need to make sure your students or audience understands are: • Solar System — the Sun and its family: planets, dwarf planets, moons, and smaller chunks • Milky Way Galaxy — the great “island” (grouping) of billions of stars in space, of which the Sun is only one member • Galaxy — any large group of billions of stars (we know many billions of such galaxies) • Universe — everything that our instruments can tell us about (the collection of all the galaxies) • Light Year — the distance that light travels in one year (about 6 trillion miles or 10 trillion kilometers) Some students or audience members might not understand: 1. The difference between the Solar System, galaxy, and universe. 2. That there is only one star in our Solar System: the Sun. Many people believe stars are sprinkled among the planets in the Solar System. 3. That our Sun is a star. It’s just a star that we are very close to. The rest of the stars are tremendously far away. 4. That the Solar System is within the Milky Way Galaxy. 5. That the Milky Way Galaxy is so large that light — the fastest thing in the universe — would take some 100,000 years to cross from one side of it to the other Starting the Activity 1. Engage students or your audience in some discussion about scale models and about the solar system. (If possible, do some of the scale model activities in Section D of The Universe at Your Fingertips.) For example, ask them if the Sun were the size of a basketball, where do they think dwarf planet Pluto would be? It would be a grain of sand, almost ¾ of a mile from the basketball! And that’s just our home system — our local neighborhood. Now tell the group that we want to enlarge our view and think about the Milky Way Galaxy, the giant island of stars in which the Sun is located. Tell them to be prepared to have their minds boggled! 2. Engage students and audiences in a discussion about the units we use to measure distances in space. While miles or kilometers are fine for measuring distances on The Universe at Your Fingertips • Astronomical Society of the Pacific Page 2 Galaxies and the Universe H4 • The Birdseed Galaxy Earth, they are just too small to help much with the huge gulfs of space that separate us from the stars. If possible, do activities D6 or G10 in The Universe at Your Fingertips, but if you haven’t, just get everyone talking about using light as your measuring stick. You could start by defining a light minute, the distance light travels in one minute: it equals 18 million kilometers or 11 million miles. The Sun is about 8 1/3 light minutes from the Earth — that means, light from the Sun takes a little more than 8 minutes to travel to us. Now, ask them to think about a light hour, the distance light travels in an hour: its length is 1.1 billion kilometers or 670 million miles. Pluto is Annotated diagram of the Milky Way Galaxy and its Spiral Arms of Stars, seen looking top down. (From NASA about 5.5 light hours from Spitzer Space Telescope Project) the Sun. Once we get out to the 100,000 light years across. stars, even light (the fastest thing in the universe) takes We’re going to shrink the Solar System in our minds, years to travel the huge distances from Earth to there. So so that the average distance from the Sun to Pluto, we measure distances in light years, one of which equals 5½ light hours, is about the distance across a quarter. 9.5 trillion kilometers, or roughly 6 trillion miles. The A quarter is one inch in diameter. So the diameter of nearest star is about 4.3 light years away. the Solar System (the distance from one side of Pluto’s If your group feels overwhelmed by these numbers, orbit to the other) would be about two quarters wide. they now understand why we are doing this activity. Everybody try to picture this. On this scale, the Sun is Assure them that everyone feels overwhelmed by such so small, you really couldn’t see it. numbers. NOTE to Teacher: On this scale, the Sun is 30 times smaller than a grain of sand. The Earth is microscopic. A Scale Model for the Galaxy Since the palm of their hand is about the size of two quarNow tell the students or your audience that we will make ters, you can also ask them to imagine that the solar sysa scale model that includes both our Solar System and tem is shrunk down to be the width of a student’s hand. our Galaxy. It’s not going to be easy, because the solar Next tell them we will think about the Milky Way system is only light hours wide and the Galaxy is about Galaxy, the island of stars we live in. It is 100,000 light The Universe at Your Fingertips • Astronomical Society of the Pacific Page 3 H4 • The Birdseed Galaxy Galaxies and the Universe YEARS across. Ask everyone to write down their guess how big the Milky Way is on the scale where two quarters or a student’s palm represents the Solar System. Would it be bigger than this room? The school? The whole city? Make sure everyone has a chance to write down a suggestion before you give the answer. If there is time, students might get together in small groups and compare answers. Each group could come up with a new answer based on their discussion. The answer is about 2,500 miles (4,000 km) across on this scale. Ask the students or audience if they can think of something they know that is about 2500 miles wide. The answer is the continental United States from coast to coast. To summarize, if the Solar System is shrunk down to a size about twice the size of a quarter, the Milky Way Galaxy would span the width of North America! Give everyone a chance to talk about this result with their groups. Were they surprised? again with their groups. On our scale model, 1000 light years is about 25 miles (40 km). So our model Galaxy would be 2500 miles across by 25 miles thick — a ratio of about 100:1 Before you do the activity, find a city in your area that is about 25 miles (40 km) away from where you are presenting this activity or two well-known local landmarks that far apart. Alternatively, ask students to come up with some well-known place about 25 miles away. Then have them picture that the thickness of the Galaxy is from here to there, straight up. The cruising altitude of commercial airplanes is about 7 miles (11 km) up. The thickness of our scale model of the Galaxy is about 3 times farther up than an airplane flies. Ask students how many of them have flown in an airplane? How small does an airplane that is seven miles high look from the ground? How small would a quarter look at that height? We couldn’t see it! So although the Galaxy is very thin, its width is huge compared to our solar system. Further Characteristics of this Model 2. Where Are We in the Galaxy? 1. How Thick is the Galaxy? Continue the discussion by asking, “Now that we know how wide the Galaxy is, how thick do you think it is?” Have students look at some images of spiral galaxies like our own and then make an estimate. Where we are, the Milky Way Galaxy is about 1000 light years thick. Ask them to estimate how thick that would be on our model. If possible, have them discuss it Remember that while the Galaxy is the size of our country, two quarters are our Solar System. If we were making a model of the Galaxy in the U.S. (and North America), where in the country would we put the quarters representing the Sun’s family? Ask them to see if anyone knows. The Sun is about 27,000 light years from the center of the Milky Way. Since the whole disk has a radius of 50,000 light years, you can say that we are roughly half- The Milky Way arches across this 360-degree panorama of the night sky above the Paranal platform, home of European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope. The Milky Way stretches across the sky opposite the observatory. To the right in the image and below the arc of the Milky Way, two of our galactic neighbours, the Small and Large Magellanic Clouds, can be seen. The open telescope domes of the observatory are all visible in the image, which was made from 37 individual frames with a total exposure time of about 30 minutes, taken in the early morning hours. (ESO, H. H. Heyer) The Universe at Your Fingertips • Astronomical Society of the Pacific Page 4 H4 • The Birdseed Galaxy Galaxies and the Universe way out from the center of our Galaxy. So where is that in the U.S.? Maybe over the Rocky Mountains. What else in North America is half-way from the center? (Students could make measurements on a map of North America, perhaps one they print out from the Web.) 3. The Number of Stars in the Galaxy Our Galaxy is full of stars, only a tiny fraction of which are visible to the naked eye or a pair of binoculars. There are so many of them, it’s hard to count (and some are hidden behind the vast reservoirs of dust which are part of our Galaxy and block our view). So we have to estimate the number of stars in the Milky Way. Such estimates are partly based on surveys, much as pollsters estimate support for a candidate or issue in the next election based on representative surveys. The best estimates of the number of stars in the Galaxy range from 100 billion to over 400 billion. The generally accepted best number these days is about 200 billion. This is a good time to ask the class or group: “Is our Sun one of these billions of stars?” and to be sure that everyone understands that it is. So how many stars is 200 BILLION? Remember, on the scale where the solar system is two quarters and the Galaxy is the width of the US, the stars themselves are tiny. So we need something tiny to represent them. Let’s use bird seeds. (Pass out packages of bird seed to each student group to let them get a feel for how big the seeds are.) Mention that bird seeds are actually too big for most of the stars on our North America sized galaxy scale, but we’re just using them as an illustration. Red milo bird seed NOTE to Teacher: On this scale, the size of stars is generally much smaller than the smallest grain of sand. The bird seed is about the size of red giant stars. But for the purposes of getting students to have a sense of scale, this is an OK approximation. How can we imagine what it would be like to have 200 billion bird seeds? Such numbers are very hard for the human mind to deal with. Let’s start by building a mental image of the volume taken up by 200 billion bird seeds, if we just put them in one place. Ask students or the audience what they think (they should be looking at their package of bird seed while doing their estimate). If they are stuck, you might ask: Would 200 billion bird seeds fill their desk or their classroom? Would it be as big as the gym in their school? Let them write down their estimates, and, if there is time, discuss them with their group. Then ask, is there someone here about four feet (1.25 meters) tall? (If no one, indicate on your body how high four feet is). Imagine a football field surrounded by a wall four feet high. Fill the football field with this birdseed to the top of the wall. That’s the volume of 200 billion seeds (representing the 200 billion stars in the Milky Way Galaxy.) Ask students to take a minute and compare this to their own estimates. 4. The Distribution of Stars in the Galaxy Now, to complete our model, we need to put those birdseeds not on a football field, but scattered around North America. How will they be scattered? Not evenly, since the Milky Way Galaxy has more stars in the middle than on its outskirts. Take about a third of the stars and spread them over Kansas/Iowa for the central bulge of our Galaxy. Take the rest and distribute them all over North America, in a space 25 miles (40 km) deep. Give students or the audience a bit of time to absorb this while they look at their birdseed. The stars are very small, and even though there are so many of them, the space we have to put them in as very, very large. So now ask the students: will the birdseeds be very close to each other when we spread them out all over North America? Not really. Are the stars very close to each other in the Milky Way? No, they are separated by huge gulfs of space. Let’s look at some real examples of stars that students may have heard of or studied and put them into our model. The Universe at Your Fingertips • Astronomical Society of the Pacific Page 5 H4 • The Birdseed Galaxy Galaxies and the Universe On this scale our nearest star (the Alpha Centauri system, 4+ light years away) is about 600 feet/200 meters or 2 football field lengths away. Sirius (8+ light years away) is about 1/4 mile/400 meters away (4 football field lengths). Polaris, the North Star, (430 light years away) is about 11 miles/18 km away. To review: if our solar system is the width of two quarters, the Galaxy is a disk as wide as the U.S., 25 miles high, taking up most of the space in North America. Our Solar System is about half-way out from the center of the Galaxy, maybe over the Rocky Mountains. Imagine yourself again very, very tiny, flying high over the Rocky Mountains. When you look straight up or straight down, you see a just few stars. But look across toward Kansas, and what do you see? Many, many stars, fading into a haze as they get more distant, like distant city lights fade into a haze. This is what the Milky Way in the sky is: we are looking at our Galaxy edge-on in that more crowded direction. David Darling’s Milky Way Page: http://www. daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/G/Galaxy.html Quick Tutorial with Images by Prof. H. E. Smith: http://cass.ucsd.edu/public/tutorial/MW.html 5. An Exercise for Students Can you calculate how far from us in our model some other well known objects in the Galaxy would be? a. The double star Mizar in the handle of the Big Dipper b. The bright star Deneb c. The bright star Vega d. The Orion Nebula (M42) where new stars are seen forming. Answer: The Orion Nebula is about 40 miles (65 km) away (pick a city or landmark at that distance) and would be a cloud of gas and dust ¾ of a mile (1 km) wide. Compare that to the two quarters representing our Solar System. See the Calculation Details Sheet at the end for how we figured out some of these analogies. A Few Web Resources about the Milky Way Galaxy: Cornell University Milky Way Page (with Questions & Answers): http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/milkyway.php Ten Interesting Facts about the Milky Way: http://www.universetoday.com/22285/factsabout-the-milky-way/ The Universe at Your Fingertips • Astronomical Society of the Pacific © copyright 2010 by the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. www.astrosociety.org Page 6 H4 • The Birdseed Galaxy Galaxies and the Universe The Birdseed Galaxy: Calculation Details Sheet © copyright 2010 Astronomical Society of the Pacific Galaxy the size of North America: BREADTH = 100,000 light years Sun to Pluto is represented by a quarter: 1" (3 cm) = 5.5 light hours Diameter of Solar system: 11 light hours or 2" (6 cm) How many inches or feet in a light year on this scale? 365 days in a year x 24 hrs in a day = 8760 hrs in a yr ÷ 5.5 light hrs in 1 inch (3 cm) = 1592 inches (40 meters) in a light yr ÷ 12 inches (30 cm) in a foot = 132 feet (40 m) for one light yr How many feet or miles (m or km) across the Galaxy on this scale? 132 feet (40 m) for one light yr x 100,000 light years = 13,200,000 feet ÷ 5280 feet in one mile = 2,500 miles (4,000 km) for 100,000 light years THICKNESS of the Galaxy: 1,000 light years 132 feet for one light yr x 1,000 light years = 132,000 feet ÷ 5280 feet in one mile = 25 miles (40 km) for 1,000 light years RATIO: 2500 miles across by 25 miles thick – about 100:1 How much volume do 200 billion “birdseed stars” take up? Use a 4" x 4" x 2" (10cm x 10cm x 5cm) box and a 35mm film canister as a scoop. Use a big bag of the milo birdseed. Count the number of birdseeds in one scoop, then calculate how many “birdseed stars” will fit in the box, as follows: Scoop up level scoopfuls of stars and count how many scoops it takes to fill the box. It should be about 14 scoops. How many “stars” does a 4" x 4" x 2" box hold? There are approximately 1300 “stars” in one scoop. A 4 x 4 x 2 box holds about 14 scoops. 1300 x 14 = ~18,000 stars in a box So how many boxes do we need to fill up to get 200 billion stars? 200,000,000,000 ÷ 18,000 stars in a box = ~ 11 million boxes A football field, goal line to goal line is 300 feet (91 m) and about 160 feet (50 m) wide or 3600" by 1920". How many boxes in one layer? 3600" divided by 4" (width of box) = 900 boxes from goal line to goal line. 1920" divided by 4" (length of box) = 480 boxes sideline to sideline. To cover the field one layer deep: 900 x 480 boxes = 432,000 boxes. How many layers to make 11 million boxes (using our example above)? 11,000,000 boxes needed ÷ 432,000 boxes in one layer = ~ 25 layers of boxes How high is 25 layers? 25 layers x 2" per layer = 50 inches or ~4 feet (1.25 m) • Imagine football field surrounding by four walls and filled 4 feet deep with birdseed. That’s 200 billion seeds representing the 200 billion stars in the Milky Way Galaxy. • Now spread them 25 miles (40 km) deep all over North America, with about ⅓ of them on the middle over Kansas/Iowa. Enjoy your trip! The Universe at Your Fingertips • Astronomical Society of the Pacific Page 7