Mercury's average distance to the Sun - more precisely, its semi-major axis, i.e., the average between the closest and farthest distance to the Sun - is 0.387 AU.
58 (36) or .39
Mercury from the sun 57,910,000 km (0.38 astronomical units), closest to the sun.
1.38
The closest planet to the sun is mercury I know because I'm clever lol.
29.98 Since Neptune is 4497000000km away from the sun and an astronomical unit is 150 million km, you would divide 4497000000 by 150000000 and that is 29.98
0.387 is the average distance from the Sun to Mercury in AU. Note: AU=astronomical unit
23412846662834 Units
Mercury from the sun 57,910,000 km (0.38 astronomical units), closest to the sun.
Betelgeuse is 40,473,416.93376 AU' (Astronomical Units) from Earth.
Mercury--0.387 astronomical units Venus--0.723 astronomical units Earth--1.0 astronomical units Mars--1.524 astronomical units Jupiter--5.203 astronomical units Saturn--9.529 astronomical units Uranus--19.19 astronomical units Neptune--30.06 astronomical units Pluto--39.53 astronomical units Please note that these are all mean distances, and the actual distance will vary as to the location of the specific planet in its specific orbit.
156855
70 million km (44 million miles), or 0.466 astronomical units
1.38
The closest planet to the sun is mercury I know because I'm clever lol.
one.
Mercury's orbit is the most elliptical of the eight planets' orbits, with eccentricity of 0.206. Mercury has an average distance from the Sun of 0.387 astronomical units, and the Sun is off-centre by 20.6% of that, or 0.080 astronomical units. So Mercury's distance varies from 0.307 to 0.467 AU, or in kilometres 46 millon to 70 million, which is quite strange. The Sun's rays that shine on Mercury are more than twice as intense at the closest approach as they are at the furthest away.
depends where planet X is
Venus is about .718 to .728 Astronomical Units from the Sun.