Because the Earth and Saturn both orbit the Sun, the distance between Earth and Saturn varies constantly. I use the Stellarium program to calculate the distance; as of 12:45 PM PDT on April 5, 2009 it is 8.514366 AU.
venus (in terms of distance from the sun). In terms of distance from the earth, it is Mars In terms of size, it is Saturn.
Mercury is the sixth farthest planet from Earth.The planets on order of distance from Earth, starting with the farthest:NeptuneUranusSaturnJupiterMarsMercuryVenus
Saturn, Its mean distance is 9.53 AU, where one AU (Astronomical Unit) is the earth to sun distance.
No. Saturn is a gas planet.
Saturno esta mas alejando del sol que la tierra
Saturn is the 6th planet from the Sun. The closer planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, and Jupiter. The farther planets are Uranus and Neptune.
The distance between Earth and Saturn varies as both planets orbit the Sun. On average, Saturn is about 1.2 billion kilometers (746 million miles) away from Earth. At its closest approach, Saturn can be as close as 1.2 billion kilometers (746 million miles) and at its farthest, it can be as distant as 1.7 billion kilometers (1.1 billion miles).
The earth? The order goes, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.
Assuming 'your planet' to be Earth. To some extent the question is meaningless because you would have to define where in the orbits the planets are to work out the instantaneous distance between them (Saturn could be on one side of the Sun and Earth on the other) It would be more meaningful to ask the distance between the orbits of the orbital paths of the planets not the planets themselves, in which case the separation of the orbits is approximately 8 AU.
Saturn is nearly 10 AU from the sun. (Earth is 1).
Planet Saturn is 9.5 au's away from the sun. An au is astronomical unit used to measure distances from a planet to the sun.
The sixth planet from the Sun is Saturn. The planets in order of their distance from the Sun are: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Pluto was considered to be the ninth planet from the Sun, but was recently declared not to be a true planet.