The Earth circles the Sun in an orbit about 584 million miles long (940 million km).
(multiply 93 million miles x 2 x 3.1416)
You can also calculate this by using the Earth's average orbital speed of 29.8 km/sec.
This is roughly 66661 miles per hour x 24 hours per day x 365.25 days per year.
600
93 million miles !
The distance between Earth and Saturn is 932 million miles. The circumference of the planet Saturn is 235,300 miles at its equator.
The Earth is about 93 million miles from the Sun.
That depends on how far you are from it in your orbit. If you're 1 million miles from the center of the sun and travel in a circle, then the length of your orbit is about 6,283,185 miles . If you're 10 million miles from the center of the sun and travel in a circle, then the length of your orbit is about 62,831,853 miles. If you're 93 million miles from the center of the sun, and travel in a circle, and start out in exactly the right place at just exactly the right time, then you'll always be pretty close to the Earth, and the length of your orbit will be about 584,336,234 miles.
The orbit of the earth is elliptical. At the closest point, the earth is 147 million kilometers from the sun. At the farthest, the earth is 152 million kilometers from the sun.
1.6 million miles
93 million miles !
It is a bit less than a quarter of a million miles from the Earth to the moon.
The radius of the orbit is 238,000 miles and you have to multiply by 2 pi, which is 6.283, so the answer is 1.5 million miles.
The radius of Earth is about 4,000 miles.
93 million miles from Earth, on average.
At its closest point, Mars is 35 million miles (56 million km) from Earth.
The distance between Earth and Saturn is 932 million miles. The circumference of the planet Saturn is 235,300 miles at its equator.
If you're riding on the Earth, then it's about 584 million miles.
1 million miles
93 million miles away from the earth
It is 365 million miles to Jupiter.