All of them? I don't understand what you're trying to ask.
PlanetAverage distance from sun in kmMercury57,909,175Venus108,208,930Earth149,597,890Mars227,936,640Jupiter778,412,010Saturn1,426,725,400Uranus2,870,972,200Neptune4,498,252,900
The distance of the planets from the sun does not change because of the gravity surrounding each planet is pulling them into continuous orbit.
There are probably many such printable charts.
There are 4, all of which lie between the sun and the asteroid belt. These planets are (from lowest distance from the sun to the highest): Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.
In order of their distance from the sun, the rocky planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars.
The sun has all the gravity to keep the planets a certain distance from the sun.
10000000023 km
uranus
The apogee.
Keplar showed that there is a relationship between the planets distance from the sun and the time taken for one orbit (planets year). This is described in Keplars third law; the square root of the time taken to orbit the sun is proportional to the cube of the average distance between the sun.
Not at all. The planet's daily rotation is independent of its distance from the Sun.
The average distance is 57.9 million kilometres.