A
physical model is a replica of something typically
too large or too small for us to easily observe directly.
A good physical model is usually constructed at a size that
a person can easily manipulate with their hands so they can
explore characteristics of the real thing as a model. Examples
are a globe of the Earth, a street map you keep in your car,
or a model of DNA. The bridge to the familiar here is representation
of the real thing at a size we can literally handle, and explore.

The central element of the Voyage exhibition is a
physical model of the Solar System at the one to 10-billion
scale. The real Solar System is exactly 10 billion times larger
than Voyage. The sizes of the Sun, planets, and moons
are represented on the same scale as the distances between
these objects, which provides visitors the stark reality of
small worlds in a vast space.
In addition, the storyboard for each planet includes a whole
disk photograph of the planet next to a photograph of the
Earth at the same scale. These photographs are 2-dimensional
physical models, and they allow the visitor to understand
the relative size of the planet compared to familiar Earth.

Physical modeling is also heavily used in the grade K-13 Voyage
lessons. At the elementary level, its use is as simple as
a student drawing a view of their home from the front door,
from a tall building, from an airplane, and from space.
At the middle school level, a pinhole tube
pointed to the Sun creates a small image of the Sun—a
model of the Sun—on the screen at the back of the tube.
The image of the Sun and the length of the tube represent
a physical model of the real Sun and the Earth-Sun distance.
By calculating the number of model Suns side-by-side that
would span the length of the tube, the student is actually
calculating how many real Sun’s side-by-side would span
the real distance between Earth and Sun. The middle school
student is measuring the distance to the Sun with a paper
towel tube, small squares of aluminum foil and graph paper,
and a couple of rubber-bands. Elegant inquiry-based science
education doesn’t require a sophisticated laboratory
apparatus.
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