About 1.52 AU
1.5 AU
Uranus is around 19 AU from the sun, theres no planet that is 1.9 AU from the sun. the closest to this is Mars, at 1.5 AU.
Mars has an elliptical orbit. It gets as far as 249,209,300 km (1.665 861 AU) from the sun and as close as 206,669,000 km (1.381 497 AU).
the distance between mars and Neptune is: 9574.7 million km Neptune is about 30 times farther from the sun than the Earth is; it averages 30.06 A.U. from the sun. Then you can do the math, 1 AU is the distance from the Sun to Earth, so it would be about 29.06 AUs == ==
On average 1.524 AU. For miles multiply by 1.496E11/1609.
It varies with each planet's position in its orbit. Mars is farther out from the Sun, and orbits more slowly than the Earth does. At the "conjunction", when the two planets are closest together, they are about .5 AU apart. But 8 months later, when Earth has raced ahead and is now on the opposite side of the Sun from Mars, the distance is about 1.5 AU.
AU(astronomical unit) is not an unit of time but distance. It is a mean distance between Earth and Sun and it's roughly equal 150 million kilometers. If you are asking for straigth line distance between Mars and Earth, it can be anything between about 0.52 AU, when the planets are closest together and 2.52 AU when they are on opposite sides of Sun.
Mars orbits beyond Earth, so it is more than 1 AU from the sun.
The Earth is 1 AU from the Sun while Mars is 1.52 AU from the Sun so the distance from Earth to Mars varies from 1.52-1 to 1.52+1 AU, which is quite a range. To put AUs into miles multiply by 93,000,000.
Mars of course.....
1.5 AU.
1.5 AU
The frost line lies between Mars and Jupiter at 3.5 AU from the sun
Mars's average distance from the Sun is roughly 230 million km (1.5 AU).
Mercury--Sun= AU Venus--Sun= AU Earth--Sun=1 AU Mars--Sun= AU Jupiter--Sun= AU Saturn--Sun= AU Uranus--Sun= AU Neptune--Sun= AU Pluto--Sun= AU
Mars has an orbit round the Sun that has an average distance of 1.52 astronomical units from the Sun, that is 1.52 times the Earth's distance. The orbit is an ellipse with an eccentricity of 0.093, which means that the distance varies between 1.52 x (1 ± 0.093) AU. So the distance varies between 1.38 and 1.66 AU. The orbit looks like a circle with the centre offset from the Sun by a distance of 1.52 x 0.093 AU, or 0.14 AU (the difference between the major and minor axes of the ellipse is extremely small).
Uranus is around 19 AU from the sun, theres no planet that is 1.9 AU from the sun. the closest to this is Mars, at 1.5 AU.