19
Given an image or animation of a body in space, the learner identifies it as a moon when (and only when) it orbits a planet, distinguishing it correctly from inner planets (1-feature minimum-difference partner), comets, asteroids, and outer planets.
- grade level
- 5
- frames
- 17
Let's compare that to an inner planet like Mercury. Mercury is a round, rocky body, but it orbits the Sun, not a planet. Because it does not orbit a planet, we know Mercury is not a moon.

You can see a bright illustration of the Sun in the center of the solar system with a dotted circular path around it. A grey, rocky sphere named Mercury is traveling on this path. This clearly shows us Mercury orbiting the Sun instead of orbiting a planet, distinguishing it from a moon.