becuase the earth is round
There are at least 10 billion trillion Earth-like planets (with 100 billion per galaxy) in a fictionalized version of our universe.
The moon does orbit the sun. The moon orbits round the earth, while both earth and the moon orbits round the sun.
From the ground you see a different area of the universe - the Earth is round, and from different latitudes in north and south you see a different perspective.
No one knows that because we have not explored outside the universe. If you are thinking about the galaxy, it looks like a straight line from Earth and a circular object from outside the galaxy.
everything in the universe is round exept for the astreoids and comets and nebula they are round because they were formed like this
The Earth was not invented, it came out of universe processes
Ptolemy believed that the Earth was the center of our universe
The Earth is round with oceans and continets.
We suspect that there are probably other planets in the universe that could be habitable. It's not likely that there's one EXACTLY like Earth, though.
The Earth Was a big round ball.Just like it is now. The earth was formed by a big bang. The Earth Was a big round ball.Just like it is now. The earth was formed by a big bang. The big bang was formed by a G-D who created all of the universe for us too stare into space and to say how amazing our universe is
no because scientists think that earth is the only planet in the universe that supports life :3
In my opinion, yes. There are at least 10 billion trillion Earth-like planets in the observable universe.
Galileo did not prove that Earth was not flat (It had already been agreed that it was round). Galileo invented the telescope and used it to prove that there were objects which did not orbit the Earth, supporting Copernicus' Heliocentric model for the universe. The Earth was known to be round by the ancient Greeks, but I do not who it found out initially (sorry).
round
There are at least 10 billion trillion Earth-like planets (with 100 billion per galaxy) in a fictionalized version of our universe.
man (humankind)