Categories

Permalink

Emersyn spent Saturday afternoon working on her Saturn project which was due today. The assignment was to put together an advertisement to promote living on or visiting Saturn. She needed to use facts about the planet in her advertisement. Jim and Emmy created a paper mache for the planet, got out the paints to give it color and used pieces of foam core from another project to create the rings. They were busy while I was off with the girls in Ningbo!

Discover the moons of Saturn
Why stay on Earth with only one moon when you can come to Saturn that has at least 62 discovered! Of the 62, only 53 have been named – so place your bet and name a moon! There’s a new adventure waiting to be discovered at each and every moon. You can start off at the closer moons of Saturn – Epimetheus, Janus, Pandora, Prometheus, Atlas or Pan. For the more adventurous, visit Enceladus, Saturn’s brightest moon or Titan, Saturn’s biggest moon.

Better Living on Saturn!
Tired of the crowded cities on earth? Enjoy the wide open spaces of Saturn! With 100 times the surface area of the Earth there’s no crowding! At 890 million miles away from the sun, there’s no need for any sunscreen. If your interested in weight loss, life on Saturn will take off that stubborn last 10 pounds. It’s gravitational force at 92% of the Earth’s makes you light on your feet even when you’re are wearing your Special Saturn Space Suit!

Ride the Rings of Saturn!
Are the Rocky Mountains and Sierra’s easy? Do you need a new challenge? Then come over to Saturn and Ride the Rings! You can pick from 8 different rings. This new level of difficulty comes with challenging rides to avoid dust, rock and ice particles making up Saturn’s rings. Saturn’s rings also never have the same course. They change with each rotation of Saturn, always creating a new challenge.

Explore the Core
There is so much adventure here on Saturn! You can even explore the core! Plow through the many layers of Saturn’s atmosphere, cutting through the brilliant clouds of hydrogen, helium and methane with a temperature of -176 C ( -295 F). After passing through the brilliant clouds you’ll discover the iron core with it’s pools of liquid and metallic hydrogen. The temperature at the core can range up to 10, 000 C – 15, 000 C (18, 000 F – 27, 000 F)! Before you go, you need to put on a Special Saturn Space Suit and Special Saturn Space Boots, allowing you to adjust the temperature inside the suit! The suits protect you from harmful radiation, chemicals, and the raging temperatures for this once in a life time experience!

As always, she put in the extra effort to meet the requirement of the assignment.

Average Rating: 4.9 out of 5 based on 251 user reviews.

Comments are closed.