Krazy Kat, what you attempted would make an awesome classroom project for middle school students! Again, it conveys a sense of scale. Proportionately speaking, there is just as much "space" within the atom as there is within the solar system. I seem to recall that if the sun were the size of a grain of sand, the closest star,
Alpha Centauri, would be about two miles away!
I do appreciate it, lorin, and in a manner of speaking, we're all working on overcoming those limitations. Indeed, it seems to me those people dance because they have finally realized, it makes no difference which direction you go. Microcosmic or macrocosmic, miniturization or magnification, they dance because the song (and the pattern) remains the same: it is the Song of Life.
Perhaps members of this forum would be interested in this link:
The Size of Our World
This compares all the small, rocky, worlds. Maybe some of you know that Pluto was recently demoted to minor planet status. Pluto itself hasn't changed, merely the scientific definition of "planet" has.
This compares the gas-giant planets with the small, rocky, worlds.
This compares the sun with its family of planets.
This compares the sun with a few nearby stars. Depending on the exact method used, we could say the sun is just a bit smaller than the average star. Keep in mind that the vast majority of stars are smaller than the sun.
This compares the sun with a few well known Red or Blue Supergiant stars. There are very few stars larger than
Antares.