Lesson 7 - Lesson Plan - Distinguishing Asteroids and Comets
Lesson 7 - Lesson Plan - Distinguishing Asteroids and Comets
Understanding the origin of asteroids and comets, and their motion, helps scientists to explain the nature
and formation of the Solar System. Component 1: Short Review
Time: 7 minutes
Ask students to answer the following questions on their worksheet.
Sample answers:
Q1. • Our Sun and the celestial/planetary/astronomical objects that go around it.
Q2. • Sun
• Planets
• Moons
• Asteroids
• Comets
• Meteors
Sample student responses: Astro means star [from Greek, astronomos = ‘star-arranging’.]
Component 4B
Read out the following questions and ask students to answer in the space on their worksheet.
Sample answers:
Q3. • An Asteroid – because asteroids are generally closer to Earth – they originate in the orbits between
Mars and Jupiter – about 400 million kilometers away and they orbit the Sun more quickly, maybe every
100 years. Comets come from over 5 billion kilometers away and most don’t come by the Sun very often –
many would only come close to the Sun every 100,000 years.
Component 4C
Read out the following questions and ask students to answer in the space on their worksheet.
Q1. What type of energy and/or forces are likely to affect comets as they travel closer to the Sun?
Q2. Make some labelled drawings to show the different shapes that Asteroids and Comets can have.
Q3. If asteroids usually orbit in the Asteroid Belt between Mars and Jupiter, what could cause an asteroid to
head towards and hit Earth?
Watch students answering, giving encouragement. Ask students to volunteer answers. Select a good sample
answer for students to copy. This may come from students or sample answers.
Sample answers:
Q1. • Light, • heat, • gravity
Q2. • sample drawings:
Q3. • It might have collided with another asteroid and that changed its direction.
• It could move close to a large planet which would change its path due to the planet’s gravity – gravitational
attraction;
• It might have been from a bigger asteroid that collided and broke into pieces, and it is a piece that is heading
for Earth.
Component 5: Lesson Conclusion
Time: 5 minutes
1. Has the activity helped you to think more about the astronomical objects of the Solar System?
2. What did you enjoy about the lesson?
3. What is something you would like to learn more about in this topic?