PASS
Planetarium Activities for Student Success
Strange Planets
This show, first announced in the March issue of The Planetarian,
is
NOT a precorded/prerendered program for fulldome
systems, but we do
present the program here at LHS live with the fulldome
system we have.
It is designed as live audience participation program,
about
50-minutes long, but is modular, and as such can
be adjusted for
shorter lengths. Current version is presented at
LHS for public
audiences, best for ages 8-adult.
The show (50 min version) has the following sections:
- Introduction (5 min): Pose the context-setting questions:
Are we
alone? Do you think there might be other life
out there? Hundreds of
planets outside our solar system have already
been discovered.
- Spectroscopic Method (10 min): Demo spectrum from a
flashlight fitted
with diffraction grating, then a star-planet
demonstration/model of
how gravity of an extrasolar planet causes a
star to wobble, which in
turn causes shifting spectral lines (the Doppler
shift). How much a
star wobbles depends on the mass of extrasolar
planet(s) going around
it and how fast a star wobbles is an indicator
of how close it is to
its star and hence how high its temperature is.
- Stars with Planets (5 min): Show two very easy-to-find
stars with
planets: Pollux (binary star in Gemini) and Alrai
(orange star in
Cepheus). Audience considers what it might be
like to live on a "strange" planet, e.g. one with a binary star
or an orange star.
- Kepler's Laws and Habitable Zones (5 min): Audience
learns that a
habitable planet is one that has temperature
and conditions for
liquid water; that planet orbits are oval or
elliptical in shape
(Kepler's 1st Law) and that how quickly a planet
orbits its star
depends on how close it is to its star, in accord
with Kepler's 2nd
and 3rd Laws.
- Transiting Planets (10 min): Use a 2-planet orrery,
light sensor and
graphing software to demonstrate how brightness
changes can be used
in finding extrasolar planets--observing transits
where a planet
periodically blocks starlight, even though the
planet is not visible.
The audience sees the size of a planet is directly
related to that
amount of starlight it blocks and that how often
starlight is blocked
is related to how close a planet is to its star,
thereby inferring
the planet temperature and habitability.
- Finding an Earth-like Exoplanet (10 min): Audience studies
simulated
light curves to find pattern of an Earth-size
in the habitable zone
of its star.
- Kepler Star Field/Conclusion (5 min): Conclude with
more specifics
about the NASA Kepler Mission, including where
in the sky its target
regions of study is.
Strange Planets was field-tested at 5 planetariums and
the final
version revised based on field-test feedback.
Show kit includes:
- CD-ROM with a script book (PDF), all
still images, and movies
needed (in electronic format)
- Rainbow projector (diffraction grating mounted
on a flashlight).
- Star-planet models.
---One-planet model to demonstrate wobbling motion
of a star.
---Two-planet orrery (geared, hand-cranked).
- Light Sensor with computer interface and graphing
software (Mac or
PC). User must supply needed laptop, and video
projector for
projecting real-time light curves on the dome.
The NASA Kepler EPO team at Lawrence Hall of Science (LHS)
and SETI
Institute has been in collaboration with NASA Astrobiology
Institute
(NAI) and the Pacific Science Center (PSC) to produce
this
audience-participation planetarium show.
This show on DVD will be available for purchase through
Sky-Skan.
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