Always? No. Some people thought the Earth was a disk held up by four elephants on the back of a giant turtle (a motiv adpoted by a popular science-fiction/fantasy series). Aristarchos of Samos published the first heliocentric model, but it was centuries before the so-called Copernican theory was generally accepted.
Correct. In ancient times people believed the Earth was the center of the universe. (They also believed the Earth was flat.)
um a way that earth might be a dynamic system is that it always moves when it is rotateing and things are always moving inside the earth and by the way good question!(:
He placed the Sun in the middle of the Solar System, instead of the original format where the Sun, Earth, and moon were all in the middle.
They thought people had always existed.
Mesosphere
equator
It isn't.
no it is not
Yes and no. It depends when you mean. The idea of a round Earth was accepted before the idea of the Sun being in the middle of the solar system. It was only about 400 years ago that people began to believe in the "heliocentric" (Sun centered ) solar system.
No, the Sun is.
um a way that earth might be a dynamic system is that it always moves when it is rotateing and things are always moving inside the earth and by the way good question!(:
Earth ....
if you mean stand, it never was in the middle of the solar system If you mean sand then i have no idea what you are saying...
The Sun is the massive star in the middle of the Solar System providing the Earth with heat, light, and life.
The pattern of the solar system will always be Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune. Earth will always have life and be the third planet.
the magneti feild of earth is stronger near the bottom of the earth beacause the earth s like a magnet and in a magnet the two poles are always magneticaly stronger than in the middle.
The pattern of the solar system will always be Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune. Earth will always have life and be the third planet.
NO, because the sun is the middle of our solar system.