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  2. Location of Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Location_of_Earth

    Knowledge of the location of Earth has been shaped by 400 years of telescopic observations, and has expanded radically since the start of the 20th century. Initially, Earth was believed to be the center of the Universe, which consisted only of those planets visible with the naked eye and an outlying sphere of fixed stars. [1]

  3. Cosmic Calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_Calendar

    1 Jan: 13.8: Big Bang, as seen through cosmic background radiation, which would have been last emitted 14 minutes after midnight 19 Jan 13.1 Oldest known Gamma Ray Burst: 26 Jan 12.85 First galaxies form [4] 16 Mar: 11: Milky Way Galaxy formed 13 May: 8.8: Milky Way Galaxy disk formed 2 Sep: 4.57: Formation of the Solar System: 6 Sep: 4.4 ...

  4. Copernican principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copernican_principle

    The Earth's central position had been interpreted as being in the "lowest and filthiest parts". Instead, as Galileo said, the Earth is part of the "dance of the stars" rather than the "sump where the universe's filth and ephemera collect". [4] [5] In the late 20th Century, Carl Sagan asked, "Who are we? We find that we live on an insignificant ...

  5. Cosmological principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmological_principle

    In modern physical cosmology, the cosmological principle is the notion that the spatial distribution of matter in the universe is uniformly isotropic and homogeneous when viewed on a large enough scale, since the forces are expected to act equally throughout the universe on a large scale, and should, therefore, produce no observable inequalities in the large-scale structuring over the course ...

  6. Cosmos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmos

    The Indians [who?] believed in a cyclic universe related to three other beliefs: (i), time is endless and space has infinite extension; (ii), earth is not the center of the universe; and (iii), laws govern all development, including the creation and destruction of the universe. The Indians believed that there were three types of space ...

  7. Shape of the universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shape_of_the_universe

    The observable universe (of a given current observer) is a roughly spherical region extending about 46 billion light-years in all directions (from that observer, the observer being the current Earth, unless specified otherwise). [3] It appears older and more redshifted the deeper we look into space.

  8. Cosmology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmology

    The Hubble eXtreme Deep Field (XDF) was completed in September 2012 and shows the farthest galaxies ever photographed at that time. Except for the few stars in the foreground (which are bright and easily recognizable because only they have diffraction spikes), every speck of light in the photo is an individual galaxy, some of them as old as 13.2 billion years; the observable universe is ...

  9. Earth Prime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_Prime

    Earth Prime (or Earth-Prime) is a term sometimes used in works of speculative fiction, most notably in DC Comics, involving parallel universes or a multiverse, and refers either to the universe containing "our" Earth, or to a parallel world with a bare minimum of divergence points from Earth as we know it — often the absence or near-absence of metahumans, or with their existence confined to ...