Make a Comet on a Stick!

an animted gif of the comet on a stick flying past the camera

A comet is a chunk of ice, rock, and gas flying through space. When they get close to the sun, they heat up. We can see their glow and long tails. In this activity, you’ll make your own comet that can fly around the room!


What you need:

  • Chopsticks or a popsicle stick
  • Metallic ribbon
  • Scissors
  • Tin foil


Ribbon Colors

If you have three different colors of ribbon, you can make a very accurate comet. Comets have a nucleus, which is the main body of the comet. They have a coma, which is the glowing part around the nucleus. Then they have two tails: a dust tail and a gas tail.

a diagram of a comet with the coma and nucleus labeled on the head, and the tail labeled with gas tail and dust tail.

In our "comet on a stick," the tin foil is the nucleus. The red ribbon is the coma. The silver ribbon is the dust tail, and the gold ribbon is the gas tail.




What to do:

  1. Cut five pieces of ribbon: two long pieces, two medium pieces, and one short piece. If you want an extra long tail, make the long pieces about three feet in length.

  2. a photo of a work surface with tin foil sheets, scissors, chopsticks, and metallic ribbon piece laid out

  3. Tie your ribbons around the end of your chopsticks or popsicle stick. If you want the ribbon to be as long as possible, tie the knot close to the edge of the ribbon.

  4. a photo of the ribbon tied around the end of the chopsticks

  5. Cut three pieces of tin foil so they’re roughly square shaped.

  6. Hold the ribbon pieces off to one side and gather the tin foil around the end of the stick.

  7. a photo of the ribbon being held to one side as the tin foil sheets are gathered around the end of the chopsticks

  8. Form the tin foil into a ball while keeping the ribbon tail off to the side.

  9. the foil is being compressed into a round shape
    the foil is now a round shape over the end of the chopsticks with the ribbons sticking out the side

  10. Repeat with two more sheets of tin foil. Gather it around and form it into a ball. If you want a bigger comet, add more tin foil!

  11. a photo of hands cupping the tin foil together into a ball

  12. Take your comet on a stick and fly it around the room!

  13. a finished comet on a stick on a table



Quick Comet Facts

  • No two comets are alike. They differ in size, shape, and what they’re made of.

  • Comet tails are a result of solar wind. Energy and particles from the sun push on the comet. This force pushes dust and gas behind the comet. The ion dust and gas have different weights, so they separate, making two specular tails.

  • Once scientists saw a third tail, which was a smaller tail forming just between the dust and gas tail. They discovered it was made of salt.

  • Comet tails have been discovered to be so long that Voyager 2 passed through one that was thousands of miles away!




Download a PDF of this activity.

article last updated April 27, 2020
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