Mercury is 48 million miles closet point
venus is 23.7 million miles at its' closet point
mars is 36 million miles closet point
Saturn is about 100billion miles closet point
uranus is about 2.57 billion closet point
neptune is about 4.4 billion km closet point
Pluto is about 4.2 billion km. and this is when earth is farthest from the sun
and the earth and the sun is 93million miles.
hope that helps
Earth's mean orbital distance from the sun is 149, 597,870.7 km, or 1 AU (astronomical unit). The distance of Venus, the next planet toward the sun, is 107,710,466.9 km, or .72 AU. The distance of Mars, the next planet away from the sun, is 227,388,763 km, or 1.52 AU.
This information allows you to compute the distance between Earth and its closest neighbours. Earth is 1.0 AU - .72 AU from Venus, and 1.0 AU - 1.52 AU away from Mars. After doing the math, you should find that the distance between Earth and Venus is approximately 41,887,403.8 km, and that Earth's distance from Mars is approximately 77,790,892.76 km.
The earth and all the other planets are in constant movement in relation to each other. The distances vary by a very large amount. You would need to state the date and time for an accurate answer. Even so it would take considerable calculation.
Sheer distance. We are talking about millions and millions of miles alone between Earth and Mars. When you factor in the distance between other planets, like from Jupiter to Saturn, the expanse of space only grows. It takes time to travel that far.
Assuming 'your planet' to be Earth. To some extent the question is meaningless because you would have to define where in the orbits the planets are to work out the instantaneous distance between them (Saturn could be on one side of the Sun and Earth on the other) It would be more meaningful to ask the distance between the orbits of the orbital paths of the planets not the planets themselves, in which case the separation of the orbits is approximately 8 AU.
Yes the Earth does rotate like the other planets (except for the distance of the rotation(assuming your talking about the rotation around the Sun); the wobble of the Earths axis compared to other planets; and the time it takes to rotate)
The distance from Earth to the Sun is 93 million miles. Uranus has a mean distance of 1.78 Billion miles from the Sun. So the mean distance from Eath to Uranus is (1.78 billion miles - 93 million miles) = 1.687 Billion miles
earth has living creatures on it......obviously
Because all of the planets are orbiting the SUN, the distance between Earth and the other planets are always changing. Take Venus, for example. Right now, Venus is between the Sun and Earth, so the distance to Venus is only about 40 million miles. In about 8 months, when Venus is on the other side of the Sun from us, the distance will be more like 130 million miles. There is a free planetarium program called Stellarium that you can download and install, which will allow you to calculate the distance from Earth to any other planet or moon.
Sheer distance. We are talking about millions and millions of miles alone between Earth and Mars. When you factor in the distance between other planets, like from Jupiter to Saturn, the expanse of space only grows. It takes time to travel that far.
The distance between the planets can even vary at different oppositions. The closest possible opposition distance between Earth and Venus is 38 million kilometers. This is the closest that any planet comes to Earth. (The point when the planets are at their closest approach to each other is called opposition).
Assuming 'your planet' to be Earth. To some extent the question is meaningless because you would have to define where in the orbits the planets are to work out the instantaneous distance between them (Saturn could be on one side of the Sun and Earth on the other) It would be more meaningful to ask the distance between the orbits of the orbital paths of the planets not the planets themselves, in which case the separation of the orbits is approximately 8 AU.
Mainly size, density, distance from other planets, distance from the nearest star, existence of satellites, age, shape, (The Earth is flattened on its poles.) and many other features.
life
Yes the Earth does rotate like the other planets (except for the distance of the rotation(assuming your talking about the rotation around the Sun); the wobble of the Earths axis compared to other planets; and the time it takes to rotate)
because of gravitational force of attraction between the earth and other planets
Mars and Jupiter - and Ceres if you want to include Dwarf Planets
Mars is the 4th planet around the sun and it revolves between two planets Earth and Jupiter.
The distance from Earth to the Sun is 93 million miles. Uranus has a mean distance of 1.78 Billion miles from the Sun. So the mean distance from Eath to Uranus is (1.78 billion miles - 93 million miles) = 1.687 Billion miles
earth has living creatures on it......obviously