ask somebody else
i don't know?
Uranus can tell you
Neptune and Jupiter are both really far from Pluto Pluto is sometimes in the other galaxy because that's where its rotation goes to! :D
Not counting the Sun, the next nearest star is 4.3 light years from us.
Not as far apart as stars are from each other, but yes, they are a long way apart.
Each planet stays in it own orbit or path as it circles the sun. The orbits are very very very far apart. the planets never move out of their orbits so they never crash into each other. space probes that go from earth to Venus and Mars our closet neighbor planets have to travel for several months. space probes that go to the farther planets have to travel for years. :) Answer from my first book about space, a question and answer book.<3
how far planets are each other and where they are . :)
The nearest star is more than 4 light-years away, we do not have the technology to travel that far within a human lifetime.
All the planets orbit the Sun. They do so at different speeds and all have different lengths of orbits. So the distance between any two planets is constantly changing and no definitive answer can be given. Below are the approximate distances in kilometres and miles that each planet averages from the Sun. The figures cannot be used though to say how far each planet is from the next. Mercury averages about 57,910,000 kilometres or 35,985,274 miles from the sun. Venus: 108,200,000 or 67,235,480. Earth: 149,600,000 or 92,961,440. Mars: 227,940,000 or 141,641,916. Jupiter: 778,330,000 or 483,654,262. Saturn: 1,426,980,000 or 886,725,372. Uranus: 2,870,990,000 or 1,784,033,186. Neptune: 4,497,070,000 or 2,794,479,298. Pluto, no longer considered as a planet, averages 5,913,520,000 kilometres or 3,674,661,328 miles from the sun. In terms of our year, this is how long it takes each of them to orbit the sun. For example, Jupiter takes 11.86 of our years to complete a full orbit of the Sun. Mercury 0.24 Venus 0.62 Earth 1.00 Mars 1.88 Jupiter 11.86 Saturn 29.46 Uranus: 84.01 Neptune: 164.79 Pluto: 248.54
All of the 1000 or so planets discovered so far, or most of them, are inside the Milky Way.
Outside of our solar system the nearest planet is 10.5 light years away orbiting the star Epsilon Eridani.
Because he discovered the planets in the solar system and how far apart they are from each other
sorta there are inner and outer planets the inner planets are alike and outer planets are alike to but inner and outer planets are different.