How to Make a Model for a 6th-Grade Science Project on Lunar Eclipses and Solar Eclipses
- 1). Attach a 10-centimeter hard foam ball with glue to the end of a three-meter-long board to represent the Earth.
- 2). Insert one end of a stiff wire into a 2.5-centimeter hard foam ball.
- 3). Attach the small ball by the wire to the other end of the board to represent the moon. Adjust the wire so the centers of the two balls line up.
- 1). Go outside on a sunny day to demonstrate the lunar eclipse.
- 2). Hold the board with the Earth closer to the sun than the moon.
- 3). Adjust the position of the board until the shadow of the earth completely covers the moon to create the lunar eclipse.
- 1). Go outside on a sunny day to demonstrate the solar eclipse.
- 2). Hold the board with the moon closer to the sun than the Earth.
- 3). Adjust the position of the board until the shadow of the moon falls across the Earth to create the solar eclipse.
- 4). Observe how the shadow of the moon does not completely cover the Earth. This is the way it happens during a real solar eclipse.