If you are asking how far the Moon is from the Earth, the easy answer is about 250,000 miles or 400,000 kilometers. If you want to know how long is the orbit of the Moon (the length of its journey around the Earth each month) then the answer is roughly 1,570,000 miles or 2,528,000 kilometers.
The moon measures ABOUT 2,160 miles across.
Let's do a little math. Earth is 93 million miles (on average) from the sun. The circumference of a circle is 2pi(r), or in this case, 584,000,000 miles. 584 million miles. It takes the earth 365 days to circumnavigate the sun. That is 1.6 million miles per day, or 67,000 miles per hour. Does it feel like you're wheeling 67,000 miles per hour around the sun?
Every complete circle is 360o.
Every meridian of longitude is a semi-circle that joins the north and south poles. So the length of each one is 1/2 of the earth's polar circumference, about 12,400 miles. (rounded)
No places on Earth are that far apart. Earth is only about 8,000 miles in diamater, giving it a circumference of a little less than 25,000 miles. The moon, at its closes, is about 220,000 miles from earth.
As the Earth revolves around the Sun on a fixed orbit, the Earth spins on its axis. Each revolution around the Sun is one year. Each full rotation of the Earth on its axis is one day.
Each meridian is a half-circle from the north pole to the south pole of the earth.
No. Any great circle on the earth has a circumference of about 24,000 miles. The circumference of the Arctic Circle (and the Antarctic circle too) is about 9,945 miles. Imagine circles around the North Pole. The closer to the pole the circle is, the smaller it is. If you were right there at the North Pole, you could walk a 10-foot circle around it. The Arctic Circle is a circle around the pole, but about 1,570 miles south of it. The only circle around the pole that's a great circle is the Equator.
Let's do a little math. Earth is 93 million miles (on average) from the sun. The circumference of a circle is 2pi(r), or in this case, 584,000,000 miles. 584 million miles. It takes the earth 365 days to circumnavigate the sun. That is 1.6 million miles per day, or 67,000 miles per hour. Does it feel like you're wheeling 67,000 miles per hour around the sun?
The Prime Meridian and the meridian of 180° longitude combine to form a great circle on the Earth. Each of them alone is a semi-circle.
The Earth travels about 92 million miles in its orbit around the sun each day.
Every complete circle is 360o.
The Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn are each about 1,620 miles from the Equator.The Arctic Circle and the Antarctic Circle are each about 4,590 miles from the Equator.The Tropic of Capricorn is about 6,210 miles from the Arctic Circle.
Each layer of atmosphere around the Earth is found at different heights. The Troposphere is found at 4 to 12 miles, or 23,000 to 65,000 feet above the Earth.
The Prime Meridian and the meridian of 180° longitude combine to forma great circle on the Earth. Each of them alone is a semi-circle.Every parallel of latitude also circles the Earth completely, but among those,only the equator is a great circle.
Mercury- 57,000,000 miles from Earth Venus-23,700,000 miles from Earth Earth-0 miles from Earth Mars- 35,000,000 miles from Earth Jupiter- 500,000,000 miles from Earth Saturn-746,000,000 miles from Earth Uranus-1,687,000,000 miles from Earth Neptune-2,680,000,000 miles from Earth Pluto-94.5 million miles from Earth
Yes, the Earth is tilted relative to the orbit around the sun. This is the cause of seasons and midnight sun/dark time north of the Arctic circle and south of the Antarctic circle (each located at 90° minus the tilt angle of their respective hemisphere).
Very close to one degree, or about 1.6 million miles relative to the sun.