It orbits at 569 km above Earth.
The Hubble is in a near-circular low-Earth orbit. It's approximately 559 km (347 mi) above the Earth's surface. If your car could drive straight up, it'd take about 6 or 7 hours to reach the Hubble. In comparison, the moon is between about 356500 km (221519 mi) and 406500 km (252847 mi) away.
The Hubble Space Telescope (technically it is not a 'spacecraft') orbits at 559 km (347 miles) above the Earth, at a speed of 7,500 m/s (17,000 mph).
The HST orbits at 569 km or 353 miles above Earth.
The Sun; its diameter is 1392684 km while the HST has a diameter of 2.4 m only.
558 km
The Hubble Space Telescope (or HST) is not in a geostationary orbit. The HST is located at an average altitude of 600 Km. Earths' geostationary orbit is at approximately 36 000 Km.
The Hubble space telescope is in near Earth orbit at a orbital height of 559 km (347 miles)
559 km (347 miles)
It orbits at 569 km above Earth.
The Hubble is in low earth orbit at about 589 km. A link can be found below which an investigator can follow for more information.
Answer About 347 miles Answer About 568 km
The Hubble is in a near-circular low-Earth orbit. It's approximately 559 km (347 mi) above the Earth's surface. If your car could drive straight up, it'd take about 6 or 7 hours to reach the Hubble. In comparison, the moon is between about 356500 km (221519 mi) and 406500 km (252847 mi) away.
At the moment, it can be 70.4 +1.3 −1.4 (km/s)/Mpc, but more generally it is 67 ± 4 (km/s)/Mpc
The Hubble's orbital altitude is about 559 km (347 miles) above the Earth's surface ... less than half of the distance from New York to Chicago.
The ISS orbits at 400 km above Earth; the HST at 569 km.
The Hubble Space Telescope (technically it is not a 'spacecraft') orbits at 559 km (347 miles) above the Earth, at a speed of 7,500 m/s (17,000 mph).