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 Walking among the planets


 
 

The Rotary Club of Anchorage raised $620,000 for the planet walk, which includes this three-sided digital Sun station. Photo courtesy of Rotary Club of Anchorage

In Anchorage, Alaska, USA, you don’t need a telescope to look at the planets -- you can walk to them.

The secret is a scale-model planet walk created by the Rotary Club of Anchorage and amateur astronomer Eli Menaker. Interested trekkers start in downtown Anchorage at a 3-ton model of the sun and encounter each of the planets along a 10-mile route ending at a ski chalet.

Every step equals 186,000 miles, and heading to Jupiter from Earth is a little more than a half-hour stroll.

Menaker introduced the idea for a temporary walk to city officials in 2003 while a student at Service High School in Anchorage. Before heading off to Middlebury College in Vermont, he was approached by Anchorage Rotarians with the idea of making permanent planet displays, as part of the club's centennial project.

"We ended up drawing from people in different walks of life. We had fundraisers, we had engineers and people with science backgrounds," says club member Julius Brecht, an attorney and former NASA physicist.

The Anchorage club raised more than $620,000 to enhance Menaker’s plan.

Stepping it up 

Menaker says his original Sun was a circular tarp covered with yellow adhesive tape. “I quickly realized we had to step that up," he said.

A local artist used over 2,400 ceramic tiles to craft a 12-foot-by-6-foot hemispherical model of the sun and sculpted sunspots to scale.

Menaker wrote text describing the planets and consulted with an artist and a contractor to configure the planet kiosks. Brecht and others worked to create a digital display for the Sun station at the start of the walk.

"I told our committee that what would really add some zing would be to make it interactive," says Brecht.

Rotarians designed the three-sided, 9-foot-tall Sun station with three screens on which participants can view Native American sun stories and NASA images.  

Before the club dedicated the walk to the city in August 2006, members reached out to the city’s school district and to the Imaginarium science center to incorporate the project into their curriculums. Additionally, Rotarians have pushed the fitness aspect of the walk through events like the Run/Walk Winter Solstice Challenge on 21 December.

"Early on we resolved to involve other organizations so that this thing will have life not because of individuals, but because of the ties we made with local institutions," Brecht says.

Learn more about the planet walk .


8 Comments:
At 9:27AM on 30 December 2008, Leticia Parra - D. 4170 Mexico wrote: 2009 Astronomy International Year Rotarians may work on Public Image with some project like this one. Congratulations Anchorage RC.
At 9:08AM on 18 December 2008, RTN. SYED AZMATULLAH RC: CHENNAI PHOENIX RD: 3230 wrote: It is a wonderful project having constructed permenant scale-model planets. It will be an amazing experience to walk through the planets where every step equals 186,000 miles and heading to Jupiter from Earth is a little more than a half-hour stroll. The project has drawn people from different walks of life - fundraisers, engineers, scientists, artists etc. Congrats to Eli Menaker, amateur astronomer for his idea and RC of Anchorage, Alaska, USA , for having raised more than $620,000 and made it real as part of centennial project.
At 9:08AM on 18 December 2008, Rtn President Bews Rodrigo wrote: A great Project .
At 2:45PM on 16 December 2008, David Rabbitt wrote: This project took great vision. Congratulations on bringing so many people together to make the vision become a reality!
At 2:53PM on 15 December 2008, Rotr joseph wrote: fantastic project
At 9:23AM on 15 December 2008, Waite wrote: Rotary is good.
At 9:20AM on 15 December 2008, Zahiruddin Khan wrote: This is a marvellous visualization, More so, since it has been translated into reality. Sounds more interesting than the Griffith Park Observatory in Los Angeles or the one at Strawberry Canyon in Berkeley, California. Three cheers for Rotary Club of Anchorage and Eli Menaker for a job well done. IPP Zahiruddin Khan, Rotary Club of Rawalpindi Central, Ditt. 3270 Pakistan and Afghanistan
At 9:17AM on 15 December 2008, Marlene Alfred wrote: I first read about this project on ROTI and thought then that this is a fantastic project. This report gives more detail and further enhances that fact. It points up the commitment, innovation and cohesiveness in the work of the Rotary club of Anchorage. Excellent project and one that can last indefinitely.

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