The position the Earth is currently and for the past 4 billion years has been the only place this planet can be habitable. If we moved even a mile farther or closer to the sun, we would most likely freeze or burn to death.
saurn
None because there is no planet on the earth. but they are near the earth but if you are talking about the earth itself then it would be the earth.
it depends if its near a sun. remember, MOONS AND PLANETS ARE NOT LIGHT SOURCES. they simply reflect the suns light. therefore, if they are not near enough to a sun, the moons would be dark, as would the planet, cos there is hardly any light to reflect. (oh and there is no known planet with 62 moons.)
Eris is a "dwarf planet", and does not have enough gravity to make the surface round, or to clear other objects near to it.
Eris is a "dwarf planet", and does not have enough gravity to make the surface round, or to clear other objects near to it.
Eris is a "dwarf planet", and does not have enough gravity to make the surface round, or to clear other objects near to it.
mars
The planet Earth is not expected to "disappear" in a conventional sense. However, it will eventually be uninhabitable due to natural processes, such as the Sun expanding into a red giant in about 5 billion years, which could engulf the Earth. Additionally, human-induced factors like climate change may threaten life on the planet in the near future. Ultimately, while Earth may not vanish, its capacity to support life could dramatically change over time.
Venus is very near the Moon yesterday and today. From Asia, it would have appeared exceptionally close last night.
In September 2009, the star or planet that appeared near the moon in the southern sky would likely have been the planet Jupiter. Jupiter is often visible to the naked eye and appears as a bright object near the moon in the night sky.
Titan orbits the planet Saturn.
Earth