How big is the object actually? It depends on how far away you are from it.
Imagine you're looking at a balloon in your classroom. If the balloon is right next to you, it looks pretty big, like it could touch your face! But if the teacher takes the balloon and puts it all the way up on the whiteboard, it looks much smaller, like a tiny dot.
That’s because when something is closer, it seems bigger, and when it's farther away, it seems smaller. It's kind of like how your favorite toy looks huge in your hand but small when it's on the other side of the room.
How we figure out real size
Sometimes people use tools to know exactly how big something is, even if it’s far away. Like astronomers use special tools called telescopes to see stars and planets, and then they do some math to find out how big those stars are, even though they're super far away.
So the bigger or smaller an object looks depends on its actual size and how close or far you are from it, just like your balloon!
Examples
- A big balloon looks small next to a giant truck.
- A pencil seems tiny when compared to a skyscraper.
- Your hand appears huge when you look at it with one eye closed.
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See also
- How small are we in the scale of the universe? - Alex Hofeldt?
- How Does Pareidolia - why do we See Faces in everyday objects Work?
- Just How Small is an Atom?
- {"response":"{\"What is a characteristic length scale?
- Nano World - What is NANO? How small is nano?