Lesson ​5
Orbits and Gravity in Space
Learners connect gravity to orbits and discover why orbiting objects are in a constant state of free fall. They also explore why weight changes from planet to planet even when mass stays the same.

Key Ideas
  • Every object that has mass has its own gravitational pull. The bigger the mass, the stronger the pull. Earth's gravity is strong. The Moon's is about one sixth as strong. Jupiter's is about two and a half times stronger than Earth's.
  • Mass is the amount of matter you are made of, and it stays the same no matter where you go. Weight is how hard gravity is pulling on your mass. Your weight would be different on every planet.
  • An orbit requires two things working together at the same time: gravity pulling inward, and forward motion (inertia) carrying the object sideways. Neither wins. That balance is the orbit.
  • Without gravity, an orbiting object would fly off in a straight line. Without forward motion, gravity would pull it straight down. Remove either one and there is no orbit.
  • The Moon is falling toward Earth right now. But its sideways speed is fast enough that Earth keeps curving away underneath it. It falls, misses, falls, misses, over and over. That repeating loop is the orbit. Orbiting is controlled, continuous falling.
  • The same principle that keeps the Moon orbiting Earth keeps Earth orbiting the Sun.
  • Scientists can describe and predict gravity in incredible detail, but nobody has fully explained why mass pulls on other mass in the first place. That question is still open.

Vocabulary

  • Orbit: The curved path one object takes around another, caused by the balance of gravity and forward motion.
  • Inertia: The tendency of a moving object to keep moving in a straight line unless acted on by a force.
  • Mass: The amount of matter an object is made of. Mass stays the same no matter where you are.
  • Weight: The measure of how hard gravity is pulling on an object's mass. Weight changes depending on location.
  • Free fall: Falling toward a larger object while moving sideways fast enough to keep missing it. Orbiting is a form of free fall.

Discussion Questions
  • If orbiting is just falling in a curved path, are you technically falling right now? Explain your reasoning.
  • Satellites in lower orbits actually travel faster than satellites in higher orbits. Why do you think that is?
  • If the Moon's gravity is one sixth of Earth's, what might that mean for an astronaut's health on a long Moon mission?

Hands-On Activity: Marble Orbit in a Bowl

Lab Sheet 

Supply List
  • A large round bowl or round container (a salad bowl or mixing bowl works well)
  • A marble or small ball
  • Notebook and pencil

Instructions
  • Place the marble near the rim of the inside of the bowl and give it a gentle push sideways. Watch how it travels.
  • Try different speeds. A faster push keeps the marble higher up the bowl in a wide path. A slower push makes it spiral down toward the center.
  • Let the marble slow down on its own and watch it spiral inward. Discuss: the marble lost forward speed, so gravity won. What does this model about an orbit losing energy?
  • Now try to find the speed that keeps the marble circling at one consistent height for as long as possible.
  • Discuss: in the marble's path, what is acting like gravity? What is acting like the forward motion of an orbiting object?
  • Connect it to space: if a satellite slows down too much, what happens? What keeps real satellites from spiraling down the way the marble does?

Sources