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
This is the asteroid Vesta. It is a rocky, irregular body floating in space, but it also orbits the Sun. Because its orbit goes around the Sun instead of a planet, you can see that Vesta is not a moon.

A visual showing the bright Sun in the center with a dotted circular path around it. You can see a lumpy, irregular grey rock named Vesta traveling on the path, clearly showing its orbit around the Sun. This illustrates that asteroids are not moons because they orbit the Sun.