What is PlanetWalk?PlanetWalk is a scale model of the solar system designed to fit within the boundaries of Sugarloaf Ridge State Park. Though most people know that the planets orbit the sun it is difficult to visualize just how small the planets are, compared to the immensity of the sun, and it is equally difficult to imagine the vast empty spaces between the planets. PlanetWalk is designed to give a firsthand experience of these spacial relationships. Unlike most models of the solar system which display either the relative sizes of the planets or the relative distances between them, PlanetWalk does both. To accomplish this, we shrunk the solar system more than 2,360,000,000 times, small enough for the park to include the orbit of the most distant planet, Pluto, and large enough that the smallest planets could still be seen. PlanetWalk begins at a large sign representing the sun and takes you on a four and one half mile round trip journey to the orbit of Pluto. Along the way you will pass nine trail signs representing each of the nine planets in the solar system.. Each sign is placed at a distance from the PlanetWalk sun proportional to the actual distance from the sun of the planet it represents. On each planet sign you will find a representation of the planet itself, drawn to the PlanetWalk scale. What is the Solar System?The Solar System consists of the sun, and all the various planets and heavenly bodies that revolve around it. A planet's orbit is the path it follows as it revolves around the sun.. Each planet moves steadily along it's orbital path. The farther a planet is from the sun, the more time it will require to complete each orbit. This is true not only because the more distant planets have longer orbits to complete, but because the farther an object is from the sun, the more slowly it will move. Because of this, the planets will rarely, if ever, line up as neatly as they are arranged on the PlanetWalk. While PlanetWalk extends to the East of the observatory, keep in mind that this is only one side of the solar system, which extends an equal distance on all sides of the sun. (Perhaps you noticed the signs along Adobe Canyon Road leading in to the park. These signs mark the spots where the road crosses each planet's orbital path to the west of the PlanetWalk sun.) Getting StartedTo begin the PlanetWalk, start at the sign representing the sun in the southeast corner of the Ferguson Observatory parking lot. Follow the attached map to find signs representing each of the solar systems nine planets.
Before you begin your hike, please remember to bring water, wear good walking shoes, and be warned that between Uranus and Neptune the trail is steep and rocky and thus slippery.
- Angelo Parisi |