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On Pluto you could throw a baseball over the Great Pyramid of Giza, a scientist's animation reveals

Dec 27, 2022, 23:00 IST
Business Insider
Tourists visit the Pyramid of Khufu, the largest of the Great Pyramids of Giza, on the outskirts of Cairo, Egypt.Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters
  • An astronomer's animation reveals how far the average person could throw a ball on different worlds.
  • On Pluto, your baseball could clear the Great Pyramid of Giza. On Jupiter, it plops to the ground.
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Imagine throwing a baseball. Easy, right? Maybe you've already done it a few times. Now imagine throwing a baseball on the moon.

Maybe you've seen enough videos of astronauts bouncing around up there to have an idea. Here's a clearer picture, though: On the moon you could throw that ball clean over the 186-foot-tall Leaning Tower of Pisa.

Tourists visit the leaning tower of Pisa in Italy.Jennifer Lorenzini/Reuters

OK, now picture you're on Saturn. That's a bit harder to imagine, isn't it? Nobody has been there, much less taken video.

Thankfully, astronomer James O'Donoghue did all the math and made his own video, showing a ball throw on each planet, plus Pluto and the moon. Take a look below:

"We're only currently able to experience outer space through images and video, so this style of video is designed to add more to the experience, namely the sensation of the forces on these other worlds," O'Donoghue, who works at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, told Insider via email.

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"We're throwing this ball at about the maximum speed that an average person can throw... without practice, according to various sources on the internet (mainly baseball sources)," he said.

From there, gravity determines how far the ball goes. A planet's gravity comes from its mass — more massive objects have stronger gravity — but density also plays a critical role.

NASA's Hubble Space Telescope captured this image of Saturn on July 4, 2020. Two of Saturn's icy moons are clearly visible: Mimas at right, and Enceladus at bottom.NASA, ESA, A. Simon (Goddard Space Flight Center), M.H. Wong (University of California, Berkeley), and the OPAL Team

"For example, Saturn has 95 times more mass than Earth, but it is the least dense planet in the solar system," O'Donoghue said. "So when you're on the edges of [Saturn], the force of gravity pulling you in [is] actually weaker than on Earth."

That's why throwing a ball on Saturn is nothing special. The truly remarkable throw happens on Pluto, the small ice ball of a former planet.

At just two-thirds the diameter of our moon, Pluto has such weak gravity that your baseball could clear the 455-foot-tall Great Pyramid of Giza — with room to spare.

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Four images from New Horizons were combined with color data from the spacecraft to create this enhanced color global view of Pluto.Jet Propulsion Laboratory/NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

In the end, the ball on Pluto would travel 16 times farther than on Earth.

The video plays out in "real time," showing how long each ball throw would take, O'Donoghue said. On Pluto, it takes a yawn-inducing 47 seconds.

"It makes me wonder how boring it would be to trip over after running on that world as an astronaut," he said.

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