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Maine Completes Largest To-Scale Solar System Model

Neophytus writes "The University of Maine has now almost completed its solar system model, to be unveiled officially on the June 14th at Westfield. The final planet, Uranus, will be set in place on the 13th. At forty miles from Pluto to The Sun and built to a scale of 1:93,000,000, it will be the largest three-dimensional scale model of the Solar System in North America."

2 of 211 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Why? by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Education
    Edification
    Realization
    Wonder

    Until you heard about this, did you have any real sense of the size and scale of our solar system?

    How about the rest of Slashdot?

    How about for those building this thing?

    How about for those who visit this thing?

    Imagine how tedious it is to walk from the earth to Mars, and then scale that to interplanetary scales, not even taking into account periphelion and aphelion, and gravity slingshots and lagrange tubes.

    I mean, are you going to similarly argue that museums that only display known things is worthless?

  2. Re:three-dimensional? by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    collinear or coplanar?

    The real Solar System is close to coplanar. At this scale, Pluto might be the only one where you'd notice the difference.

    It looks like they're laying everything out in a single line rather than faithfully reflecting current orbital positions. Which makes sense -- would you like to have the job of moving Mercury? An illusion of collinearity is a good compromise compared to trying to build a 40-mile wide orrery.