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Find the Sun-1 of 4 Find the Sun Brief Summary This is a software activity in which visitors maneuver around a chosen planet from a position out in space until they can see the Sun. Visitors see how the planet appears to be in different “phases” depending on how much of the lit part they can see, and make the connection to the phases of the Moon. Visitors can also see how different the size of the Sun would appear from different planets. Equipment Required Laptop with Starry Night Pro A Museum Galaxy Guide partner to do Moon Phases at the same time Find the Sun can be found under “Go” on the toolbar at the top. Make sure the cursor is in the “Location Scroller” mode, indicated by the following: Main Teaching Points The lit part of a planet is the half that faces the Sun. You see different amounts of the lit part of a planet, depending upon your position. The Sun appears to be a different size in the sky when viewed from different planets. When you see only the dark side of a planet, you should be able to see the Sun somewhere behind the planet. Educational Strategy Often, a concept that you would like a learner to understand is best communicated when the learner figures it out for him- or herself. A strategy for doing this is to give the learner a target activity that is easy to verbalize, but which can only be accomplished if the learner grapples with the concept.” When the learner can successfully do the target activity, then you know he or she must have internalized the concept. The visitor’s present understanding of the given topic Concept you want the visitor to understand Easy to understand “Target” activity Find the Sun-2 of 4 In this case, the easy-to-verbalize target activity is “Find the Sun.” However, in order to accomplish this, visitors must construct for themselves an understanding of how the Sun’s light appears on a spherical body in the solar system, such as a planet or moon. This activity should be done in conjunction with the “Phases of the Moon” activity. Once the visitors have grasped this concept, it is a short step to understanding why the Moon has phases when seen from the Earth. Set Up Get with a Museum Galaxy Guide partner so that you can use this in conjunction with the Moon Phases demo. Open up “Starry Night Pro.” On the toolbar at the top, go to Go/Find The Sun, then pick a planet to begin. Be sure the cursor is in the “Location Scroller” mode. To do this, go to the pointer selector in the top left hand corner, and pick “Location Scroller,” indicated by the following: Suggested ways of presenting demo Try this: 1. Activity Ask a visitor to pick a planet, then open up that file. Show the visitor how to operate the mouse to move around the planet. Tell the visitor that the goal of the activity is to move around until (s)he can see the Sun. 2. Discussion Encourage the visitor to articulate the concepts by explaining how he or she was able to find the Sun. How does this relate to the reason that we see Moon phases? (Participating in the Moon Phases demo will help the visitor to explore these concepts from a different perspective.) Operating Tips Operating the mouse or laptop track pad may be new to some people, though even the youngest visitors who try this demo may already be familiar with how to work it. The mouse is usually the easier of the two. Questions and Answers Does the Sun look different when viewed from other planets? Find the Sun-3 of 4 Yes. The Sun appears smaller when viewed from planets that are successively further away. Demo: Show the visitor how the Sun looks from Earth. Ask the visitor to predict how the Sun would look from Pluto, then open that file and show them. Repeat with Mercury. Do the constellations look different when viewed from other planets? No. The stars are so far away compared to the distances between planets that there is no perceptible change in their relative positions. Demo: Open the Earth file and find the Big Dipper or Orion. Repeat with Pluto or any other planet (the farther from Earth the better). Note that some close-by stars such as Sirius & Alpha Centauri would appear slightly shifted. The PARALLAX (apparent shift of position when viewed from 2 locations) of about 50 stars is observable even from one side of the Earth’s orbit to the other, and would also therefore be detectable from different planets. Other Cool Stuff to Try After finding the Sun, explore the planets! Zoom into the moons of Jupiter, the rings of Saturn, or the satellites around Earth. Fast Facts On average, Pluto gets 1600 times less solar energy than Earth, while Mercury gets almost seven times more solar energy than Earth. Mars gets just under half as much solar energy as we get on Earth. You would have a hard time finding the Sun in Pluto’s sky because the Sun looks like just another bright star. Potential Problems If you or a visitor accidentally close the Starry Night Program, long delays can occur if you are not fluent in getting back to the same place. Be sure to practice opening the Starry Night Program quickly without delays. Background materials collections links) (websites, videos, articles, digital http://www.starhop.com/library/pdf/studyguide/high/SolInt-19.pdf – to compare how much solar energy different planets get https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Sun Find the Sun-4 of 4 Self assessment suggestions After doing the Find the Sun demo several times, complete the checklist and rubric below by highlighting the box that best describes your performance. Have your team leader observe your demo then complete an identical rubric. Discuss your presentation technique with your team leader along the lines of the rubric. Assessment Tools for FIND THE SUN DATE________ PRESENTER_____________ A. Checklist of pre-requisite skills 1. Can boot up computer and open Starry Night Pro preset with no delay. 2. Can use the “Move toward the dark zone” strategy to find the Sun. 3. Can explain the different sizes & brightness of the sun seen from various planets using the inverse square law concept. B. Rubric for Find the Sun Demo QUALITY LEVELS OK TRAITS EXCELLENT Levels of assistance Leaves visitors on their own to Allows visitors to try their try their own strategy own approaches and asks leading questions without taking away control from visitors Adaptation to Uses simpler language when Uses analogies, props, age/background levels talking to novices and younger drawings and recruited children visitors to represent the sun and planets as needed Sensitivity pacing to cognitive Reads visitor body language to Reads visitor body adjust the pace of giving new language and asks information. questions to ensure understanding of one concept before building on it