Want this question answered?
if you are asking "what is the relation of the planet's temperature to it's distance from the sun" then the answer is: Planets closer to the sun tend to be warmer than planets further from the sun.
You can arrange them any way you want, e.g. by size, by mass, by color, or by their distance from the SUn.
They just are. Theres nothing you can do about it.
Actually, the planets aren't all the same distance away.
The inner planets are closer together than the outer ones.
if you are asking "what is the relation of the planet's temperature to it's distance from the sun" then the answer is: Planets closer to the sun tend to be warmer than planets further from the sun.
You can arrange them any way you want, e.g. by size, by mass, by color, or by their distance from the SUn.
As a rough - not absolute - measure, yes, that is correct
Roughly speaking, as you go farther away from the Sun, planets get colder.
They just are. Theres nothing you can do about it.
poo pee and boogers and all mixed to create ma sista
the distance from the planets is 6.5 million miles between each planet.
As the names suggest, the inner planets are closer to the Sun than the outer planets.
they aren't ranged from biggest to largest
If two planets are in orbits with radii of R1 and R2, the distance between them varies from R2-R1 to R2+R1.
All eight planets have a surface temperature, though it varies as the planets distance from the sun varies. Closer planets to the sun generally have a higher surface temperature, while further planets have a colder surface temperature.
It has something to do with the planets' temperature and climate.