The distance of Mars from the Sun is 227,936,640,000 meters.
One light-year is 9.4605284 × 1015 meters
One divided by the other gives:
0.0000240934364723222013687945802 light years.
It's not a very practical use of this unit. It's like asking how much a grain of sand weighs in tons...
0.0000361 light-year, Mars is to close to the sun to be a light-year away from it.
No, mars is at its farthest a mere 250,000,000 miles away. A light year is roughly 5,878,504,500,000 miles. Thus in terms of the speed of light mars is at the farthest a mere 22 light minutes away.
mars is about 36-38 million miles from earth at it's closest orbit.
Light in a vacuum travels at about 700 million miles per hour. I've no idea how to convert 36million miles into a decimal of the speed of light.
The planet Mars is located 0.000024155306893301653 light years away from the Sun. This is equivalent to 142,000,000 miles by distance.
Traveling at the speed of light, it would take you four minutes to get to mars from earth. There must be a sum out there somewhere that would help you convert this time into a distance.
Mars is 12.67 light minutes away from the Sun. That is 2.40937209 × 10-5 light years.
The planet Mars is approximately 13 light minutes from the Sun.
A light-year is not a measurement of time but of distance. How far light can travel in a year. Your question therefore asks about the distant between the Earth and Mars which varies with their orbiting about the sun.. However, Earth and Mars are never anywhere near a light year abart. At most, they are about 12 light minutes apart.
We are a light-year away from our destination.The newly discovered, earth-like planet is a light-year away from us.
Minutes are a unit of time, not of distance. Perhaps you mean LIGHT minutes, which refer to the distance light travels in a minute. Earth is 1 AU from the sun, which takes light about 8 minutes and 20 seconds. Mars is about 1.5 AU, so when earth and Mars are on the same side of the sun, the distance between them is 0.5 AU. Light would take four minutes, 10 seconds to cross that gap. When Mars and Earth are on opposite sides of the sun, the distance between them is 2.5 AU, which would take light nearly 21 minutes to cross. On average, Earth and Mars would be at roughly right angles to the sun, so you could use the Pythagorean theorem to calculate the distance of their hypotenuse: About 1.8 AU. I'll leave the conversion of this into light time as an exercise for the gentle reader.
Mars is about 12 light-minutes away from the Sun. Mars is the fourth planet from the sun in the Solar System.
Mars is 12.67 light minutes away from the Sun. That is 2.40937209 × 10-5 light years.
The planet Mars is approximately 13 light minutes from the Sun.
1.5 billion light years away.
A light-year is not a measurement of time but of distance. How far light can travel in a year. Your question therefore asks about the distant between the Earth and Mars which varies with their orbiting about the sun.. However, Earth and Mars are never anywhere near a light year abart. At most, they are about 12 light minutes apart.
At furthest reach of the Universe about 46 billion light years away.
We are a light-year away from our destination.The newly discovered, earth-like planet is a light-year away from us.
One light year away is equal to: 9,461,000,000,000 kilometers 9,461,000,000,000,000 meters 5,879,000,000,000 miles
The undiscovered planet lay a light-year away from the swirling Milky Way galaxy.
No, Mars is a red rocky planet in our solar system, Betelgeuse is a red giant star about 640 light years away.
A light-year is the distance light travels in a year. It is about 9.5 x 1015 meters.
no mars does not share light