23327894466 AU
The mean distance between the Earth and the moon is 0.00256957312 AU
The distance from Saturn to Earth is 821,190,000 miles, or 9 AU (Astronomical Units).
The distance from a planet to its moon can vary greatly depending on the specific planet-moon pair. For example, the distance from Earth to its moon is approximately 384,400 km, while the distance from Mars to its moon Phobos is only about 9,378 km. Each planet-moon system has its own unique characteristics that determine the distance between them.
The Sun is about 400 times further away from the Earth than the Moon is.
One AU
No. The AU is the mean (average) distance from Earth to the Sun.
The distance from Saturn to Earth is 821,190,000 miles, or 9 AU (Astronomical Units).
Between 29 and 31 AU.
About 92 AU on average.
The moon is approximately 75 au's from the Earth The above answer is absurd. One Astronomical Unit (AU) is the mean (average) distance from the Earth to the Sun. If that answer was correct, the Moon would have to be 75 times further from Earth than the Sun! The average distance from the center of the Earth to the center of the Moon is 0.00256957366 AU or 384,403 kilometres (238,857 mi).
Phobos orbits Mars. So the distance between Earth and Phobos is essentially the same as the distance between Earth and Mars. This distance varies from 3-1 AU (astronomical units) to 3+1 AU. One AU is about 93 million miles.
The average distance from the sun is 30.1 AU which means that the distance from the earth ranges between 29 and 31 AU.