Amazing Video Shows the Scale of the Solar System
If Earth were as small as a marble, the solar system out to Neptune would cover an area the size of San Francisco — and that's just in two dimensions.
That point is driven home by a new video called "," which shows filmmakers Wylie Overstreet and Alex Gorosh, along with a few of their friends, building a size-accurate model of our cosmic backyard in Nevada's Black Rock Desert.
The project aims to provide a rare piece of perspective about Earth's neighborhood, team members said. []
"If you put the orbits to scale on a piece of paper, the planets become microscopic, and you won't be able to see them," Overstreet says in the 7-minute video, which has been viewed more than 1.4 million times since it was Sept. 16. "There is literally not an image that adequately shows you what it actually looks like from out there. The only way to see a scale model of the solar system is to build one."
The sun at the center of this newly constructed solar system is about 5 feet (1.5 meters) wide. Mercury sits 224 feet (68 m) away from our star, while Venus, Earth and lie 447 feet (120 m), 579 feet (176 m) and 881 (269 m) from the sun, respectively.
Jupiter is considerably more distant at 0.57 miles (0.92 kilometers), while Saturn and Uranus lie 1.1 miles (1.7 km) and 2.1 miles (3.4 km) from the sun. Neptune's orbit represents the outer limit of this minisystem, at 3.5 miles (5.6 km) away. (The team did not stake out the orbit of the dwarf planet or any other objects in the Kuiper Belt, which lies beyond Neptune.)
You can watch "To Scale: The Solar System" on YouTube .
And you can learn more about Overstreet and Gorosh and their other projects at and .
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