Since the Moon is very close to the Earth, that would be the same, on average, as the distance from Earth to Sun.
The number of kilometers from the Earth to the Moon varies. At the perigee, when it is closest, it is 363,104 km away, and at the apogee, it is 384,400 km away.
240,000 miles
Because the Moon's orbit is elliptical, its distance from Earth ranges from 356400 km to 406700 km, with an average orbital radius of 384401 km.
384403 km from center of earth to center of the moon. That does not include the holes in the cheese.
The moon can't be in two places at once.
Your 382,500 km, which is close to the diameter of the moon, is about 237,674.5 miles.
At perigee - its closest approach - the moon comes as close as 225,623 miles (363,104 kilometers). At apogee - the farthest away it gets - the moon is 252,088 miles (405,696 km) from Earth. On average, the distance from Earth to the moon is about 238,855 miles (384,400 km).
The diameter of the Moon is 3474.2 km, the diameter of the largest Uranian moon (Titania) is 1578 km. So none of Uranus' moons are bigger.
The distance between the Moon and the Earth varies from around 356,400 km to 406,700 km at the extreme closest point and the farthest point.
the moon is 3,475 km
The Moon does not orbit in a perfect circle around the Earth, so an average distance of 381,550 km is usually given, with the extremes being 356,400 km (closest) and 406,700 km (farthest away)
The diameter of the Earth is 12,742 km. The diameter of the Moon is 3,474 km. This means that the moon is approximately 27% the size of the Earth or around 1/4. To answer your question more directly, the Earth is about 4 times the size of the Moon.
Mercury is larger. size of Mercury: 4879 km size of Earth's Moon: 3475 km
The moon has a diameter of 3,476 km