The Earth at it's Equator is 40,075 km.
The moons orbit is about 1,209,480 km.
So the moons orbit is about 30 times the circumference at the equator.
If we're comparing circumferences, the moon's orbital circumference is more like 2,400,000 km, and the ratio is about 60.
it is actually 265 to be exact (but most scientists round it to 321).
"Radius" of moon's orbit, approximately 240,000 miles.
Radius of Earth, approximately 4000 miles.
Giving a ratio of approximately 60, not 265 or 321.
You just need to divide the diameter of Earth by that of the Moon. If you really want this as an equation, you can write something like:E=fM
where E = diameter of Earth, f = the factor (how many times larger), M = diameter of Moon.
The Earth and the Moon are both nearly spherical (the shape of a Basketball).
The best estimates of their diameters are 12,756 and 3,476 kilometers respectively.
The distance from one side of the Moon to the other, straight through the center, is
about the same as the distance from Washington DC to Kamloops BC, or Spokane WA,
or Yuma AZ, or Port of Spain, Trinidad (as the crow flies).
This means that . . .
-- the Moon's diameter (the distance straight through the center) is about 27% (one quarter)
the size of the Earth's diameter;
-- the Moon's surface area ... the amount of 'land' on it ... is about 7% ( 1/15 ) as much as the Earth's;
-- the Moon's volume ... the amount of space it fills ... is about 2% ( 1/50 ) as much as the Earth's.
Those are the Moon's physical dimensions. The Moon's mass ... the amount of material
it's made of ... is about 1.2% as much as the Earth's mass.
The Earth is much larger than the Moon. But it is interesting to note that of all the major planets with moons, the earth is the one whose moon is the largest in proportion to its host planet.
Short Answer: They're the same.
Long Answer: I assume you mean the orbit time about the Sun, in this case it's misleading to say the Moon orbits the Sun, it orbits the Earth, which orbits the Sun. Hence the Moon orbits the Sun at the same rate as the Earth and so it's orbit is also 365 days.
You could argue it'd differ slightly as the Moon may begin and end at different points of it's orbit of the Earth and hence would take fractionally longer to travel the full distance, but it's safe to say this distance is negligible.
FYI: the Moon takes ~28 days to complete one orbit of the Earth.
-- The earth's diameter (distance through the center) is about 3.7 times the moon's diameter.
-- The earth's surface area is about 13.5 times the moon's surface area.
-- The earth's volume is about 49.5 times the moon's volume.
-- The earth's mass is about 82 times the moon's mass.
The Moon's diameter is about 1/4 of Earth's diameter.
The Earth is approximately 4 times bigger in diameter than the diameter of the Moon. Earth is 12, 756.2 kilometers in diameter and the Moon is 3 474.8 kilometers in diameter.
The Sun's diameter is about 400 times as large as the Moon.
Earth's diameter at the equator is 12,756.1 kilometers or 7,926.28 miles. Sun's diameter at the equator is 1.392 million kilometers or 864,900 miles. The diameter of the Sun is 109 times larger than the diameter of the Earth.
The largest planet in the solar system is Jupiter, with a diameter 11.209 times that of the Earth
Europa has a diameter of 1,900 miles. Earth has a diameter of 7,926.28 miles; about four times larger than Europa.
The diameter of Jupiter is 139,822 kmThe diameter of Pluto is 2,374 kmJupiter's diameter is about 59 times larger than Pluto's
Earth is about 1.88 times larger than Mars.
Earth's diameter at the equator is 12,756.1 kilometers or 7,926.28 miles. Sun's diameter at the equator is 1.392 million kilometers or 864,900 miles. The diameter of the Sun is 109 times larger than the diameter of the Earth.
the sun is 109 times larger
I believe we have the same Sun, which has a diameter of 1,391,980 km (864,938 miles), almost 10 times larger than the planet Jupiter and about 109 times as big as the Earth. Its mass is 1.9891 ×1030 kg (4.3852 ×1030 lb.), or 332,946 times that of Earth.
14.5 times (uranus diameter 31,800 - 51,100km)
14.5 times (uranus diameter 31,800 - 51,100km)
Saturn is about 9.41 times larger than the Earth
The largest planet in the solar system is Jupiter, with a diameter 11.209 times that of the Earth
Mercury's diameter is 0.3825 times that of Earth's
The largest planet in our Solar System is Jupiter. How much larger it is depends on what criterion you use to measure. Its diameter is about 11 times the diameter of Earth. Of course, that means that its radius and circumference are also 11 times as large as the radius and circumference of Earth, respectively. Its surface area is over 100 times larger than that of Earth (just square the diameter ratio), its volume is over a 1000 times larger (proportional to diameter cubed). Jupiter's mass is about 300 times as much as that of Earth. Many planets around other stars have several times the mass of Jupiter, but in many cases, not much is known about their diameter. However, it is expected that a planet that has, for example, 2-3 times the mass of Jupiter will NOT have a much larger diameter, since its stronger gravity will pull it together.
The closest would probably be Saturn, which has a diameter of around 120 536 km, which is 9.45x Earth's diameter (12 756.2 km). The next closest is Jupiter, with a radius of 142 984 km, or 11.2x Earth's diameter.
Here are all diameters of the planets.Pluto is no planet anymore.Mercury 4,900 kmVenus 12,100 kmEarth 12,800 kmMars 6,800 kmJupiter 137,000 kmSaturn 115,000 kmUranus 50,100 kmNeptune 49,400 kmLook for yourself.Jupiter is 137000 / 12800 = 10.7times the earth diameter.
The Sun's diameter is about 100 times larger.