No, not numerically, not massively, not in distance. Not in any way I can think of.
Of the eight planets, Earth, mars, Jupiter and Saturn are the four 'middle' planets.
The sun is the center of the Milky Way. Earth was thought to be the center, but with modern equipment, scientists figured out that the sun is the middle.
Galileo's observation was that all the planets revoled around the earth and he though earth was a middle planet
If you only count the 8 major planets, then the two middle planets are Mars and Jupiter.If you count all 13 major and dwarf planets, the middle one is Saturn.
No, all the planets, including the Earth, orbit the Sun.
All planets rotate. Even earth.
Our solar system has 8 major planets, so the middle two major planets are Mars and Jupiter. If you count all major planets plus the 5 dwarf planets, the middle planet is Saturn:1. Mercury2. Venus3. Earth4. Mars5. Ceres6. Jupiter7. Saturn8. Uranus9. Neptune10. Pluto11. Haumea12. Makemake13. Eris
Galileo concluded the that the earth wasn't the center of the universe because of how all the stars and planets moved. If the earth was truly the center of the universe, it wouldn't revolve.
All, but earth.
well some planets are bigger than the earth but from the inside earth is of course bigger than all of the other planets
All massive objects (including all planets) have gravity.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars are all terrestrial planets.