Quote- "Our solar system may be the liveliest thing for trillions of miles, but all the visible stuff in it-the Sun, the planets and their moons, the billion or so tumbling rocks of the asteroid belt, comets, and other miscellaneous drifting detritus- fills less than a trillionth of the available space.You also quickly realize that none of the maps you have ever seen of the solar system were remotely drawn to scale."
Questions- How do scientists know this, if the universe is so big for them to know exactly how big it is? How are scientists able to figure out what is even outside of our solar system being that it is just so enormous? What tools allow them to do that?
Questions- How do scientists know this, if the universe is so big for them to know exactly how big it is? How are scientists able to figure out what is even outside of our solar system being that it is just so enormous? What tools allow them to do that?
Comment- It is hard to think of the universe or even the solar system because it is just so enormous and everything is just so big for us to really imagine how it looks like. Even just Earth, for me, is so big and it is just a little tiny ball when looked at in the solar system. As the author said, "...the solar system is really quite enormous," and it is but our solar system is just a little tiny thing in our galaxy and even tinier in the universe. Being so enormous, like the author said, "...it isn't possible, in any practical terms, to draw the solar system to scale." The planets are just so far apart that it would be impossible to ever draw them to scale. This means that it is almost impossible for us to imagine how our solar system really looks like.