It's actually constantly changing because the Earth's orbit is not a perfect circle, but unless you're an astronomer working on some very precise calculations 15 trillion is a pretty good rough estimate; it's within about 2% of whatever the actual value currently is.
The distance is about 150 million km; you can multiply that by 100,000 to convert it to cm. Suggestion: In engineering, rather than using cm, it has become customary to use powers of 1000, in this case meters, kilometers, millimeters, micrometers, etc.
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42. It varies by several hundred thousand kilometers over a period of years. What date / time do you want some idiot to calculate it for you for?
Approximately 14,960,000,000,000 (1.496 x 1014) average in the course of a year.
Distance between Venus and Sun is : 108.2 million km
108200000 km in cm is: 1.082 e+13
Look up the distance from the Sun to Venus in km, then multiply that distance by 100,000. If the distance is given in scientific notation, that means adding 5 to the exponent.
1.49668992 × 1014 millimetres
The distance around the Earth's equator is approximately 4,007,500,000cm.
The orbit of Mercury varies from 28,583,820 miles (46,001,200 km, 0.307499 AU) to 42,760,839 miles (68,816,900km, 0.466697 AU). That would be 4.9x 1012 cm to 6.8x1012 cm --- mean distance 5.8x1012 cm.
The distance between 4 meters and 79 centimeters is calculated by their difference. 1 m=100 cm. 4 m =100 cm . 400 cm -79 cm =321 cm.
The distance is always changing as both planets move around the Sun. The average is about 1.4 billion kilometers, or more than 8 times as far as Earth is from the Sun (8 AU). At its closest, when both planets are on the same side of the Sun, Saturn is about 8 AU (1.2 billion km or 744 million miles) from us. At its farthest, when we're on opposite sides of the Sun, Saturn is about 11 AU (1.6 billion km or 1 billion miles) from us.
ans2. As the Mars to Earth distance varies considerably, cm is an inappropriate scale to use.
The standard unit of measurement for the distance from the sun to the earth is one Astronomical Unit (AU). An AU, as defined by the International Astronomical Union, is about 149,597,871 km (92,955,807 miles). It is the mean distance between the sun and the earth.
Alpha Centuri is roughly 4.1626325x1018 centimeters from the Sun. The distance from the Earth varies depending on where we are in our orbit..
The distance around the Earth's equator is approximately 4,007,500,000cm.
The orbit of Mercury varies from 28,583,820 miles (46,001,200 km, 0.307499 AU) to 42,760,839 miles (68,816,900km, 0.466697 AU). That would be 4.9x 1012 cm to 6.8x1012 cm --- mean distance 5.8x1012 cm.
Earth's density: 5.515 g/cm^3 Sun's density: 1.408 g/cm^3
20 cm.
Suppose we assume the distance is 150 000 000 kilometres (sometimes a couple of million more, sometimes less) That is 15e7 km There are 100 000 cm in a km. That is 1e5 cm Therefore the distance is roughly 15 000 000 000 000 cm or 15e(7+5) or 15e12 cm
area of parallelogram=b*h 24*12=288 x=288/18 16 cm distance between shorter sides is 16 cm
The distance between 4 meters and 79 centimeters is calculated by their difference. 1 m=100 cm. 4 m =100 cm . 400 cm -79 cm =321 cm.
The distance is always changing as both planets move around the Sun. The average is about 1.4 billion kilometers, or more than 8 times as far as Earth is from the Sun (8 AU). At its closest, when both planets are on the same side of the Sun, Saturn is about 8 AU (1.2 billion km or 744 million miles) from us. At its farthest, when we're on opposite sides of the Sun, Saturn is about 11 AU (1.6 billion km or 1 billion miles) from us.
16kms 1 cm
3.5738 cm