107 million kilometers
There is no planet that can be described as "about as far" from the Sun as Mercury. It's the planet closest to the Sun, and the only other planet closer to the Sun than Earth is Venus, which is about twice the distance away from the Sun compared to Mercury. Considering that's a difference of roughly 51,000,000 km (0.32 AU, 1 AU is the average distance from the Earth to the Sun), that's one hell of a long way away. Still, it's closer than any other planet (however, even the Sun is closer to Mercury than Venus).
The sun provides radiation heat to Venus, and in turn, Venus develops a run away greenhouse effect that radiates a portion of that energy back into space, though the sun may not notice any of that in any significant way.
Far enough Because the orbit is eccentric its distance from the sun varies depending on which part of its orbit it is in. At its closest it is 4.4 billion km from the sun, and at its furthest it is 7.4 billion km away from the sun.
Yes. The problem is that when it is it's on the far side of the Sun from us. Since the orbital plane of Venus is not exactly coplanar with the orbital plane of Earth, the Sun isn't always "in the way" at such times, but it is always in the sky at the same time, with its much brighter light drowning out the faint light of Venus.
First of all the closest star to the milky way is the Sun and it's approximately 93 million miles away from the earth.
it is way to cold and too far away from the sun
That's just the way it was when the Earth formed.
The sun is far away from earth, yes, but it is at the right distance to keep the earth warm (through the natural greenhouse effect). If we were closer, then the earth would be much warmer (and humans may not have evolved in the same way, or at all!).
well actually the moon is way far away to the sun but to us they are close but it is always called the moon but once its the moon on top pf the sun or the other way around its called an eclipse
no for life itself to excist is impossible its 243 years away from sun and that's way too far from our sun for life or humans to excist.
No. Venus has no stars. Planets do not "have" stars, at least not in the way that they have moons or rings. It does orbit a star, however. This star is the Sun.
a good way of drawing the solar system is you can get the sun (the biggest star) then you can get Mercury and put it by the sun but smaller then you can get venus and put it by Mercury even smaller than Mercury then you can get Earth and put it by Venus size is similar then you draw the asteroid belt then you get Juipter and put it by the asteroid belt then you can get satern and put it next and then you get uranus next then last sorry i forgot mars then last is Pluto which is a dwarfh plant cause the plant is to small and to far away from the sun then neptune