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] After the acceptance of the heliocentric model in the 17th century, observations by William Herschel and others showed that the Sun lay within a vast, disc-shaped galaxy of stars.

[2] By the 20th century, observations of spiral nebulae revealed that the Milky Way galaxy was one of billions in an expanding universe,[3][4] grouped into clusters and superclusters.

By the end of the 20th century, the overall structure of the visible universe was becoming clearer, with superclusters forming into a vast web of filaments and voids.

Earth Moon Sun Venus Mercury Halley's Comet Mars Phobos Deimos Asteroid Belt Asteroid Belt Asteroid Belt Ceres Vesta Pallas Hygiea Jupiter Io Callisto Europa Ganymede ʻOumuamua Saturn Dione Titan Uranus Neptune Triton Pluto Haumea Makemake Eris Salacia Sedna Gonggong Proxima Centauri Alpha Centauri Arcturus Pleiades Capella Procyon Luhman 16 Van Maanen's Star Aldebaran Canopus Carina Nebula Sirius Vega Tau Ceti UY Scuti Lalande 21185 Betelgeuse Antares Rigel Pollux Acrux Omega Nebula Ring Nebula Luyten 726-8 Gacrux Eagle Nebula Horsehead Nebula Milky Way Galaxy Perseus Arm Large Magellanic Cloud Small Magellanic Cloud Omega Centauri Terzan 1 Andromeda Galaxy Triangulum Galaxy WLM Galaxy NGC 300 The Whale Galaxy Caldwell 5 Cetus A Black Eye Galaxy Whirlpool Galaxy Antennae Galaxies Caldwell 101 Pinwheel Galaxy NGC 1300 Sombrero Galaxy Cartwheel Galaxy M100 Arp 194 Galaxy NGC 7319 Barnard's Star Wolf 359 Castor The Bird Galaxies Mice Galaxies NGC 4314 Arp 147 Cigar Galaxy Mayall's Object NGC 5256 Tadpole Galaxy NGC 2936 Hoag's Object Sculptor Galaxy Bubble Galaxy NGC 6745 NGC 1614 Eyes Galaxies Atoms for Peace Galaxy Butterfly Galaxies Sarah's Galaxy Circinus Galaxy M66 Centaurus A Bode Galaxy Sunflower Galaxy Virgo Cluster Caelum Supercluster Centaurus Cluster ASASSN-15lh Brightest Supernova Saraswati Supercluster Clowes Campusano LQG U1.11 LQG Bullet Cluster Giant GRB Ring Hercules–Corona Borealis Great Wall Southern Local Supervoid Corona Borealis Supercluster KBC Void Pandora's Cluster Horologium Supercluster Boötes Void Huge-LQG Giant Void Shapley Supercluster BOSS Great Wall Pavo–Indus Supercluster Hydra Cluster El Gordo Cluster Sculptor Wall GN-z11 (most distant known galaxy) Northern Local Supervoid GRB 090423 (most distant known gamma ray burst) Coma Wall Tonantzintla 618 (most massive known black hole) Leo Supercluster Icarus (most distant individual star detected) Sloan Great Wall ULAS_J1342+0928 (most distant known quasar) Polaris Hadar Dubhe Alnair Regulus Spica Ran Alnilam Musica Bellatrix Regor Deneb Sargas Delta_Pavonis Alkaid File:Extended logarithmic universe illustration.png
Earth Moon Sun Venus Mercury Halley's Comet Mars Phobos Deimos Asteroid Belt Asteroid Belt Asteroid Belt Ceres Vesta Pallas Hygiea Jupiter Io Callisto Europa Ganymede ʻOumuamua Saturn Dione Titan Uranus Neptune Triton Pluto Haumea Makemake Eris Salacia Sedna Gonggong Proxima Centauri Alpha Centauri Arcturus Pleiades Capella Procyon Luhman 16 Van Maanen's Star Aldebaran Canopus Carina Nebula Sirius Vega Tau Ceti UY Scuti Lalande 21185 Betelgeuse Antares Rigel Pollux Acrux Omega Nebula Ring Nebula Luyten 726-8 Gacrux Eagle Nebula Horsehead Nebula Milky Way Galaxy Perseus Arm Large Magellanic Cloud Small Magellanic Cloud Omega Centauri Terzan 1 Andromeda Galaxy Triangulum Galaxy WLM Galaxy NGC 300 The Whale Galaxy Caldwell 5 Cetus A Black Eye Galaxy Whirlpool Galaxy Antennae Galaxies Caldwell 101 Pinwheel Galaxy NGC 1300 Sombrero Galaxy Cartwheel Galaxy M100 Arp 194 Galaxy NGC 7319 Barnard's Star Wolf 359 Castor The Bird Galaxies Mice Galaxies NGC 4314 Arp 147 Cigar Galaxy Mayall's Object NGC 5256 Tadpole Galaxy NGC 2936 Hoag's Object Sculptor Galaxy Bubble Galaxy NGC 6745 NGC 1614 Eyes Galaxies Atoms for Peace Galaxy Butterfly Galaxies Sarah's Galaxy Circinus Galaxy M66 Centaurus A Bode Galaxy Sunflower Galaxy Virgo Cluster Caelum Supercluster Centaurus Cluster ASASSN-15lh Brightest Supernova Saraswati Supercluster Clowes Campusano LQG U1.11 LQG Bullet Cluster Giant GRB Ring Hercules–Corona Borealis Great Wall Southern Local Supervoid Corona Borealis Supercluster KBC Void Pandora's Cluster Horologium Supercluster Boötes Void Huge-LQG Giant Void Shapley Supercluster BOSS Great Wall Pavo–Indus Supercluster Hydra Cluster El Gordo Cluster Sculptor Wall GN-z11 (most distant known galaxy) Northern Local Supervoid GRB 090423 (most distant known gamma ray burst) Coma Wall Tonantzintla 618 (most massive known black hole) Leo Supercluster Icarus (most distant individual star detected) Sloan Great Wall ULAS_J1342+0928 (most distant known quasar) Polaris Hadar Dubhe Alnair Regulus Spica Ran Alnilam Musica Bellatrix Regor Deneb Sargas Delta_Pavonis Alkaid File:Extended logarithmic universe illustration.png
LocationOfEarth Earth Moon Inner Solar System Outer Solar System Closest Stars Milky Way Galaxy Local Group Laniakea Supercluster Local Supercluster Complex Observable Universe
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Stereoscopic view of the universe (805 x 416) for cross-eyed viewing