An astronomical unit (abbreviated as AU, au, a.u., or sometimes ua) is a unit of length based on the mean distance from the Earth to the Sun. The precise value of the AU is currently accepted as 149,597,870,691 ± 6metres (nearly 150 million kilometres or 93 million miles).
The distance from the Sun to the Earth is one AU. The Moon orbits the Earth and sometimes is closer and sometimes further away from the Sun, so on average, it is also 1 AU from the Sun.
Mercury--Sun= AU Venus--Sun= AU Earth--Sun=1 AU Mars--Sun= AU Jupiter--Sun= AU Saturn--Sun= AU Uranus--Sun= AU Neptune--Sun= AU Pluto--Sun= AU
About 250 times greater than it is at the moment, or about the size of Earths orbit. 1 AU.
AU is a measure of distance meaning astronomical unite. AU is the average distance from the sun to the earth (average because the earths orbit of the sun is not a perfect circle). 1 AU is equal to 149, 598, 000 kilometers. So 1.49 AU is 1.49 x 149,598,000= 222,901,020 kilometers.
AU is a measure of distance meaning astronomical unite. AU is the average distance from the sun to the earth (average because the earths orbit of the sun is not a perfect circle). 1 AU is equal to 149, 598, 000 kilometers. So 1.49 AU is 1.49 x 149,598,000= 222,901,020 kilometers.
This is the Earth. It is how one astronomical unit (AU) is defined, the average distance between the sun and Earth. The Earths orbital distance from the sun is 149,597,890km (92,955,820 miles) on average.
By definition, the planet Earths average distance is 1 AU (astronomical Unit) from the sun. This is about 93 million miles or 150 million km.
Earth is approximately 1 astronomical unit (AU) away from the sun.
Jupiter is roughly 5.2 AU from the sun.
It ranges from 5.458104 AU to 5.458104 AU for an average of 5.204267 AU.
The Earth. The Earths orbital distance from the sun is 149,597,890km (92,955,820 miles) on average. This average sun to Earth distance is how one Astronomical Unit is defined (1 AU).
The Earth is 1 AU from the Sun, not the diameter. See related question.