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Comets & Space Science Projects

starry sky

To read more about comets, visit this Science Lesson.

Space Science Projects

Make a Crater

Do this project to see how craters are made. You may want to do this project outside, or inside with newspapers spread over your work area.

What You Need:

  • An aluminum pie pan or other shallow dish
  • Dry sand
  • Water
  • A cup
  • A spoon

What You Do:

1. Fill the dish with sand.

2. Add water until the sand begins to stick together, like what you would use to build a sandcastle.

3. Scoop some of the sand mixture into a cup, then smooth the sand in the pan out, to make a flat surface.

4. Sprinkle a little more dry sand into the pan, in an even layer. (Make sure it covers all of the wet sand.)

5. Using your fingers or a spoon, fling a bit of the wet sand mixture from the cup into the pan.

6. What happens when you throw a bigger spoonful? Does the crater get bigger?

A crater made by a meteorite

What Happened:

Sometimes asteroids, meteors, or comets bump into planets or the moon as they move through space. When they do, they leave an indentation or dip in the planet or moon’s surface. In this project, the wet sand from the cup was like an asteroid, meteor, or comet, and the pie pan with sand was like a planet or moon. To make the best crater, it doesn’t really matter how much sand you take from the cup, but how hard you fling it. Even just a little wet sand thrown at the pan can make a big crater!

Catch a Comet

Make a colorful ‘comet’ that you can play catch with! If you like, you can make it glow-in-the-dark for nighttime fun.

What You Need:

  • Plastic grocery bag
  • Scissors
  • Tennis ball (or any other soft ball)
  • String or ribbon
  • Glow-in-the-dark paint
  • Paintbrush

What You Do:

1. Use the scissors to cut the handles off of the plastic bag. Carefully cut down each side of the bag, to make a flat piece of plastic.

2. Put the ball in the middle of the plastic, and pull the corners together.

3. Tie the string around the plastic, close to the ball, so the plastic won’t slip off.

4. Carefully cut slits in the plastic, making 1 or 2-inch strips.

5. Decorate the comet using the glow-in-the-dark paint. You could also use stickers or add ribbon.

6. When the paint is dry, you’re ready to play!

Your homemade comet can streak through the air with its tail behind it, just like the real thing! The tennis ball is like the ice and rock chunk of a comet, and the plastic bag makes the coma and tail.

penny and nickel coinsA Penny As Big as the Moon?

A comet circles around the sun in a long orbit. How much bigger than a comet is the moon, or the earth, or the sun? Find objects in your house to show how big the earth would be if the moon was the size of a penny, or if a comet was smaller than the head of a pin.

1. If the moon was as big around as a penny, how big do you think the earth would be? The earth is almost four times as big across as the moon is. If you put four pennies next to each other, that’s how big the earth is across its middle. Can you think of something that is that size? We used a baseball as our earth.

2. If the moon is a penny, what object can show how big the sun is? The sun is huge – 109 times as big across as the earth is. Is there a room in your house that could fit 100 baseballs across it, if they were side by side? If the moon was as big as a penny, the sun would be a whole room!

In our solar system, the moon is much, much bigger than a penny! The moon is more than 2,000 miles across! It is hard to imagine how big that is.  Just like in this project though, the earth is bigger, and the sun is much, much bigger!

1. How big do you think the moon would be if a comet was as big as this dot:. ? What about the earth and sun? Try to think of an object for each.

2. If a comet was as tiny as that dot, the moon would be about the size of a beach ball (18 inches).

3. The earth would be four times as big across as the beach ball.  Can you think of something that size? Your dad standing with his arms stretched out might be as big around as the earth.

4. Even if a comet was only as tiny as that dot, the sun would still be bigger than your whole house! The sun would be about the size of a shopping mall. If you walk for two blocks, that’s how big the sun would be across.

Now that you know how big the sun, earth, and moon are compared to each other, you might have an idea of how big our solar system really is! A comet is not really as small as a dot, or even a beach ball. Comets are between one mile and fifty miles across, not including the tail! Comets are huge! But when compared to other things in our solar system, they seem pretty small.

Printable Worksheet

Print out this star chart and help kids align it to the night sky to locate and identify stars and constellations. Using a star chart is a great opportunity to talk about stars and why some look bigger and brighter than others. To use the star chart inside instead, use a straight pin to poke holes through the white dots and hold the chart up to a flashlight in a dark room.

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