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The minimum distance of Jupiter from Earth (i.e. the closest approach) is equal to about 588.5x10^6 km.
The distance between Saturn to Jupiter is 4.34 AU. An astronomical unit or AU is equal to 150 million kilometers. This distance is about 651 million kilometers.
The biggest planet, Jupiter's diameter is a huge 142,740 km, while the smallest planet, Mercury's diameter is a tiny 4,880 km. So, it would take 28.4 Mercurys to equal the diameter of Jupiter.
The earth's diameter is 3.67 times the moon's, and 0.0092 of the sun's diameter. The distance to the sun is 391 times the distance to the moon. The moon's diameter is 0.283 of the earth's, and 0.0025 of the sun's. The distance to the earth is 0.0026 times the distance to the sun. The sun's diameter is 109 times the earth's, and 400 times the moon's diameter. On the average over a month, the earth and moon are at equal distances from the sun.
Uranus is the seventh planet from the Sun, and Jupiter is the fifth. Saturn is located between them. This distance between Uranus and Jupiter is 13.94 AU, where 1 AU is equal to 149,598,000 kilometers.
No. The distance between Jupiter and Saturn is larger than that of mars and Jupiter.
The minimum distance of Jupiter from Earth (i.e. the closest approach) is equal to about 588.5x10^6 km.
Jupiter's diameter 11 times as great at that of Earth. Jupiter's volume is equal to 1,317 Earths. Jupiter is also 318 times as massive as Earth.
The distance between Saturn to Jupiter is 4.34 AU. An astronomical unit or AU is equal to 150 million kilometers. This distance is about 651 million kilometers.
Jupiter has an equitorial diameter of 142,984km. However, you should know that Jupiter, like most planets, is NOT a sphere; a diameter taken across the equator line is significantly longer than a diameter measured from pole to pole.
Diameter Jupiter: about 143,880 km Diameter Pluto: about 2,300 km
The diameter of something is the distance across it - perhaps you are thinking of the unit of length the decimetre, which is equal to 10 centimetres.
Radius is half of the diameter - i.e. it is the distance from the centre to the edge of the circle.
Circumference of a circle divided by its diameter is equal to pi
The radius of a circle is the distance from the center of the circle, out to the edge of the circle. The distance all the way across the circle is the "diameter." Half of the diameter is the radius.
The biggest planet, Jupiter's diameter is a huge 142,740 km, while the smallest planet, Mercury's diameter is a tiny 4,880 km. So, it would take 28.4 Mercurys to equal the diameter of Jupiter.
The diameter is the distance from one side of the circle, through the middle, and to the other side. It is a straight line. It is equal to The circumference (the distance around the circle) divided by pi (about 3.1415926536)