CyberScryber's Scrybes

• Mar. 27, 2006 - Sample of R. Krampf's Science Experiments





Robert Krampf's Experiment of the Week

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This Week's Experiment - #460 Scale Model of the Solar System

Greetings from Peoria, Illinois.   I have been doing shows at the Lakeview
Museum, home of the world's largest complete model of the solar system.   I wish
I were going to be here a little longer, because on April 1, they are having
an interplanetary run/walk, and I think it would be fun to be able to say that
I had walked to Mars.   Later in the year, they also have a huge
interplanetary bike ride.   If you want information on these events, or if you want to
visit the Lakeview Museum, go to http://www.lakeview-museum.org/

This week's experiment comes from my friend Sheldon Schafer, who runs the
Education Department and Planetarium here.   It is an easy way to get an idea of
how large our solar system really is.   To try this, you will need:

one standard 240 sheet roll of toilet tissue
a large area

We will start at the center, with the sun, which in our model is about the
size of your thumbnail.   Then we will use the tissue as a measuring tool.  
Starting from the sun, if you unroll two sheets, you have reached the orbit of
Mercury.   Each sheet of tissue represents about 25 million kilometers, and the
orbit of Mercury is about 57,900,000 kilometers from the sun, which puts us
just a hair past 2 sheets.   If you want to add the planet Mercury to your
model, use a very fine pencil point to make a tiny dot.   That dot is still too
big, but it will do for our purposes.

Unroll two more sheets and you get to the orbit of Venus, 108,100,000
kilometers from the sun.   Again, you can add Venus by making another very tiny dot. 
Again, the scale model of Venus would be smaller than your dot.

Unroll two more sheets and you get to the Earth, at 149,500,000 kilometers.  
Another tiny dot goes here.

To get to the orbit of Mars, unroll three more sheets, which puts us at
227,800,000 kilometers.   One more tiny dot will represent Mars.

Next in line is the orbit of planet Jupiter.   To get to Jupiter, unroll 21
more sheets, for a total of 30 sheets from the sun.   The orbit of Jupiter is
778,000,000 kilometers from the Sun.   This time we can make a bigger dot,
about .07 centimeters if you have a metric ruler.

From Jupiter to the orbit of Saturn, unroll 30 more sheets, and make a dot
about .06 centimeters.   At this point, we are 1,427,000,000 kilometers from the
Sun.

After Saturn, the next orbit if Uranus, and we will need 60 more sheets to
get there, for a total of 120 sheets from the sun, 2,869,000,000 kilometers.  
Here, we go back to making the tiniest dot that you can.

From the orbit of Uranus to the orbit of Neptune, unroll 60 more sheets,
representing 4,497,000,000 kilometers from the Sun, and make another tiny dot.

60 more sheets will take us to the orbit of Pluto, 5,900,000,000 kilometers
from the Sun.   You would need a microscope to see a dot that was the proper
scaled size for Pluto in our model.

Now look back over your solar system.   Look at all the open space, and the
tiny planets.   Think that is a lot of open space?   Maybe you want to add in
the nearest star, Proxima Centauri.   It is only 4.2 light years away, a mere
38,000,000,000,000 kilometers away.   To do that, you would need 6334 rolls of
toilet tissue, just over 96 miles of tissue, and that is just to the closest
star.   That vast amount of space requires some thought, which for me involves
some ice cream to fill some of the empty space inside me.  

Have a wonder filled week. 

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Robert Krampf's on-the-road schedule:
My calendar is now on-line.  You can see a detailed calendar, with dates,
times, schools, etc. at http://www.krampf.com/m_tour.html


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Check out my web site at:
http://www.krampf.com

From Robert Krampf's Science Education Company
PO Box 60982
Jacksonville, FL  32236-0982
904-388-6381

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• Mar. 25, 2006 - AWARE

Last night, DH took 13 year old DD to the AWARE ( Abstinence Wait-training And Relationship Education) father/daughter dinner and dance.  It was recommended to us by the leaders of our home Bible study group.  At any rate, what I have learned is that it is federally funded by the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) Family and Youth Services Bureau along with or via or under or whatever the Maternal and Child Health Bureau under the Department for Health and Human Services...I think. Yeah, okay, here's the government page I got my info from. 

I gathered that the ACLU is totally against this and other abstinence only programs by reading the letter they along with the Feminists For Free Expression; Gay, Lesbian And Straight Education Network, and a dozen other like minded entities wrote to President Bush.  I suspect they are distorting or embellishing some of the claims they are making, especially against the curriculm they mentioned in their letter.  Of course I've never seen any of it so I can't say that with absolute certainty.  I would love to get a good look at some of those curriculum just to satisfy my own curiosity.  However, it must be a good program if the ACLU hates it.  Just my whacky reasoning. 

DD was positively glowing when she came home.  She had such a good time.  Even if she is a little young for it and probably didn't get a full understanding of the program, I think the fact that she and her dad had such a good time made it worthwhile.  They are both looking forward to attending again next year. 

It seems that the folks at AWARE really do a bang up job of making the whole thing a lot of fun.  In addition to three speeches on the subject of fathers, daughters and purity, the dance and a three course meal,
there were triva questions and drawings throughout the evening for things like resteraunt meals, and free workouts at the Total Gym. Apparently the live dj played only decent songs and a lot of them were from the 80's. Every year the AWARE father/daughter dinner and dance is roughly doubling in attendance.  This year about 250 father/daughter dates attended.   I hope the trend continues. 

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