The earths angular momentum would be the same.
Nearest is Mercury, furthest is Neptune
Higher apsis and lower apsis are furthest and nearest to the center of attraction of a planet.
No. The nearest stars, apart from the sun, are much farther away than even our farthest-traveling spacecraft.
The order of the planets (closest to farthest from the sun) is: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.
At its nearest it is 245 minutes and its farthest it is 409 minutes of light travel time away. The farthest Pluto gets from Earth gets from us is about 4,650,000,000 miles.
Nearest is Mercury, furthest is Neptune
Round it to the nearest metre by rounding it to the nearest 100 cm, then if you rounded down add 100 cm otherwise you rounded up and so subtract 100 cm to get to the farthest metre. eg 125 cm to the farthest metre: To the nearest metre 125 cm rounds down to 100 cm. Thus to the farthest metre, as rounded down add 100 cm to give 200 cm to the farthest metre.
7,311,000,000km at its farthest and 4,437,000,000km at its nearest.
nearest to the sun
It is 95.5 radians.
Nearest: "Perihelion", reached in January.Farthest: "Aphelion", reached in July.
Higher apsis and lower apsis are furthest and nearest to the center of attraction of a planet.
Eight Thousand / 8000. As the nearest in this case for 7604 should be 8000 and the farthest is 7000.
5.8 is greater than 5.7
The closest and nearest country to Fiji is the Kingdom Of Tonga about 35 kilometres away from the farthest Fiji Island namely Ono-I-Lau.
The Earth's aphelion - the farthest its present orbit takes it from the Sun - is 152,097,701 kilometres. The other point, the perihelion - the nearest it gets to the Sun on its present orbit - is 147,098,074 kilometres
It is already rounded to a greater extent than that.