Hi guys- I'm going retro and flying the Boeing 727-200. Of course, it has a bunch of improvements thanks to it0uchpod's ongoing work to make the plane more realistic.
Here's just a bit of background on Aristarchus of Samos, who lived from c. 310-c. 230 BCE. He was a mathematician and astronomer who was a native of Samos. Although he wrote a number of works, only one has survived,
On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon. I have this book in my library and it is a fascinating treatise. Aristarchus' place in the history of science, and really the world is that he figured out that the Sun is the center of the Solar System, that the Earth orbits around the Sun, and that the Moon orbits around the Earth. Even though other astronomers at the time agreed with him, the Greek politicians and religious orders found this to be an affront. After all, any fool can see the Sun and the Moon rise in the east and set in the west, so obviously the Earth is at the center. Nevertheless, he lived to a ripe old age of 80, as best our records can estimate. Other astronomers were not so lucky, but that's another story. It would not be until 1543, when Nicolas Copernicus'
On the Revolutions was published that the geocentric view of the universe would begin to actually be refuted, and still decades later, when in 1610, Galileo pointed a very rudimentary telescope (a Dutch invention, by the way) at Jupiter and discovered it had moons, shattering the scientific and religious doctrine that all heavenly bodies orbited around the Earth. It took basically 19 centuries for the geocentric model to be supplanted by the heliocentric model. One has to wonder about a history in which Aristarchus' discoveries were universally accepted, but that is not the reality.
What Aristarchus got wrong (and without the aid of a telescope, virtually no one blames him for it) was the distance from the Earth to the Moon and the Moon to the Sun. His Solar System was WAY too small. This is largely because he used an early form of trigonometry to try to explain why there are total eclipses. And because the moon is visibly virtually the same diameter in the sky as the sun, he tried to calculate how big the Sun had to be and how far away to create a total solar eclipse, and not having the benefit of telescopic observation to measure the true diameter of the Sun, he just got the calculation wrong. However, in his defense, he did postulate that the stars were likely other suns and were at some great distance, although it was beyond his ability to measure that. Here's his statue on the Island of Samos, now celebrating their most famous astronomer and cosmologist, even if it was nearly twenty-five centuries late.

Image courtesy of Pintrist.
Aristarchus' diagram of the heliocentric universe:

Image courtesy of Konstable,
Theories of Aristarchus.