11
Given an image or animation of a body in space, the learner identifies it as an outer planet when (and only when) it is a large body, made mostly of gas/ice, far from the Sun (beyond the asteroid belt).
- grade level
- 5
- frames
- 20
To spot an outer planet, we have to look for the right features. This is the Sun. The Sun is massive and made of gas, but it is a star, not a planet. It produces its own light and sits at the very center of our solar system, so it is definitely not an outer planet.

We are looking at a spectacular view of the Sun, a gigantic star at the center of our solar system. It is a brilliant, blazing sphere of glowing plasma and fiery gases, radiating intense yellow and orange light. Massive solar flares and turbulent heat patterns are visible to us across its incredibly bright, active surface.