Yes.
The four in our solar system with the largest orbits are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
Venus 0.007 Neptune 0.011 Earth 0.017 Uranus 0.046 Jupiter 0.049 Saturn 0.057 Mars 0.094 Mercury 0.205 (Pluto 0.244) The orbital eccentricity of an astronomical body is the amount by which its orbit deviates from a perfect circle, where 0 is perfectly circular, and 1.0 is a parabola, and no longer a closed orbit.
When they are all in the same parts of their orbits, Neptune and Saturn are closest. However, it occasionally works out that Earth can be closest to Uranus, if Jupiter, Saturn, Mars and Neptune are all of the other side of the Sun.
The wobbling of Uranus and Neptune's orbits is primarily influenced by gravitational interactions with other planets in the solar system, primarily Jupiter and Saturn. These interactions cause periodic variations in the orbits of Uranus and Neptune over long periods of time.
Mercury?MarsVenusEarthNeptuneUranusSaturnJupiter
Jupiters orbit is between Mars and Saturn's orbit. Jupiters orbit can also be said to be within the orbits of Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. All the outer planets.
It is not "the" planet; there are eight planets that orbit the Sun: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.
Any object that orbits further away. This includes the planets Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune (in order from closest distance to sun).
Uranus orbits between Saturn and Neptune as the 7th planet in our system.
Earth is 1 AU from the Sun. There is no planet at an orbit of 2.5 AU. (Mars orbits at 1.5 AU and Jupiter at 5.2 AU).