Remember those textbook diagrams of the solar system or the foam planets that hung in a tidy row from the ceiling of your grade school classroom?
All lies.
A sprawling new installation at the University of Arizona is designed to provide a true picture of our solar system in all its humbling vastness.
The Arizona Scale Model Solar System is a collection of 10 informational signs stretching from the Kuiper Space Sciences Building on the UA Mall to Main Gate at the west edge of campus.
Each sign represents a planet or other celestial object, carefully placed to reflect its relative position in orbit around the sun. Even at 1:5 billion scale, the display covers more than half a mile. It takes about 10 minutes to walk from the sun to Neptune, a real-world (real-space?) distance of almost 2.8 billion miles.
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βAstronomical scales can be difficult to grasp,β said project lead Zarah Brown, a doctoral student at the UAβs Lunar and Planetary Laboratory.
The signs provide details on the mass, diameter, surface gravity and temperature of each solar system object. They are illustrated with NASA images and artwork by James Keane, an alumnus of the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory.
The permanent display also doubles as tribute to the universityβs out-sized contributions to planetary science. At each stop on the solar system tour, visitors can read about UA research related to that object.
Brown said they had no trouble finding all the Tucson connections they needed. βIt was harder to choose which ones to include,β she said.
Celestial stroll
The signs went up in late August. The university hosted a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the installation on Friday in front of the Kuiper Building.
Thatβs where the sun can be found, scaled down to the size of a basketball, along with the rest of the inner solar system β Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars, all grouped within about 150 feet of each other.
The distances increase as you move west along the UA Mall, out past the asteroid belt. The signs for Uranus and Neptune are two-tenths of a mile apart.
βThat gives you a sense of how lonely and vast the outer solar system is and why some of these objects are under-studied. Theyβre harder to get to,β said Brown, who is wrapping up her Ph.D. dissertation on the upper atmosphere of Saturn.
The solar system walking tour was developed with the help of a multidisciplinary team that included about 10 graduate researchers who helped write and edit the information on the signs. The display was funded through a NASA Space Grant Fellowship that was awarded to Brown in 2020 and later extended.
She said she has been fascinated by the enormity of the solar system since she first learned about it in elementary school.
Once when she was a child, she tried to draw the planets at their proper scale and distance using a calculator and some art supplies, but she had to abandon the effort when she realized that she was going to have to ask her dad for several hundred more sheets of paper.
βIt was mind blowing. Thereβs all of this empty space around us. Everything that feels so big and so important is actually really tiny,β Brown said. βThis has been something that Iβve felt compelled by for a very long time.β
The solar system exhibit is designed to serve as an educational tool for UA students and campus visitors alike. As part of the project, Brown is drafting lab exercises to help undergraduates conceptualize large numbers and vast distances by walking the installation and making calculations along the way.
Way out there
Brown said thereβs a bit of βenvironmentalismβ included on the sign for Venus, where a βrunaway greenhouse effectβ has rendered the planet hot enough to melt human-built space probes in a matter of minutes.
βThe interplay between the surface and the atmosphere are the same processes that are happening on the Earth,β she said.
A QR code on each sign links to a website that can be used with a screen reader for the visually impaired. Brown hopes the website will be expanded some day to include additional information about the solar system and the UAβs role in exploring it, along with updates as new discoveries are made.
The installation was arranged based on each objectβs average orbital distance, although some minor adjustments were made to make sure the signs ended up someplace safe and convenient.
βWe did fudge on Neptune,β Brown said. βIt would more rightly be placed in the middle of Park Avenue.β
Instead, it can be found just inside the volcanic rock wall of Main Gate at Park and University Boulevard.
Eventually, the installation will extend off campus by about 700 feet to include Pluto. Brown said they plan to place that sign near the corner of University and Euclid Avenue, as soon as they finalize a legal agreement with the Marshall Foundation, which owns much of the Main Gate Square commercial development there.
βWe decided to put it in because I think the argument about whether Pluto is a planet is awesome,β Brown said. βIt gets people emotionally fired up, which is sometimes hard to do with some of these space topics that people donβt necessarily feel personally invested in. People have definite opinions about Pluto.β
She added that the demoted dwarf planet has such a strange, elongated orbit that its sign actually could be placed as far away as Time Market, another third of a mile farther west on University Boulevard.
And if that isnβt mind-boggling enough, consider this: If you wanted to include Proxima Centauri, the closest star to our sun, Brown said the scale model would have to be expanded by about 5,000 miles, roughly the distance between Tucson and Glasgow, Scotland.
βOne of the takeaways that somebody could get from this model is that we are so precious and tiny,β Brown said. βWhy donβt we take care of our one and only home? And why donβt we treat each other a little better? All we really have is each other in this huge amount of vast space.β
Contact reporter Henry Brean at hbrean@tucson.com or 573-4283. On Twitter: @RefriedBrean