The distance of Mercury from the sun is 57,910,000 kilometers while Venus is 108,200,000 kilometers away. The Earth is 149,600,000 kilometers away from the sun while Mars is 227,940,000 kilometers apart from it. The largest planet, Jupiter is 778,330,000 kilometers distant from the sun while Saturn is 1,424,600,000 kilometers away. The last three planets namely Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto are 2,873,550,000 kilometers, 4,501,000,000 kilometers, and 5,945,900,000 kilometers away from the sun respectively.
It varies. The planets move in their orbits at different distances from the sun and at vaying speeds. The distances between them is constantly changing.
In order, the list of planets closest to the sun (from closest to farthest), Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars.
The distances between the inner planets is smaller than the distances between the outer planets.
The distances of the planets to the Sun are far greater than the sizes of the planets. For example: the Earth is about 12,000 km in diameter, but its distance to the Sun is 149,600,000 km.
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The difference is that the sun is a star, the other planets are just planets
The distances vary as the planets orbit the Sun. On average, the answer is Mercury.
It varies. The planets move in their orbits at different distances from the sun and at vaying speeds. The distances between them is constantly changing.
yes, however as compared to the outer planets, no.
In order, the list of planets closest to the sun (from closest to farthest), Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars.
there are different distances such as the closest planet mercury is 58 km away from the sun.
they have different distances from the sun
because they we're made at different times
No. The planets all orbit the sun at the same time. The planets occupy different orbits at different distances from the sun so they do not affect one another significantly.
The Bode's Law is a rule that estimates distances of planets from the Sun in our solar system based on a numerical sequence. It was proposed by Johann Daniel Titius and Johann Elert Bode in the 18th century, and while it accurately predicted the positions of several planets, it is widely considered a numerical coincidence rather than a physical law.
The relationship is described by Kepler's Third Law.
The distances between the inner planets is smaller than the distances between the outer planets.