Mercury:91.5 million km
Venus:42 million km
Mars:75 million km
Jupiter:630 million km
Saturn:1,425 million km
Uranus:2,880 million km
Neptune:4,515 million km
Comments: Obviously the distances change as the planets orbit the Sun.
Those distances look like the approximate minimum distances.
1 AU is 150 million km. Mercury is about .4 AU (60 million km) from the sun, Venus .75 AU (112 million km), Mars is 1.5 AU or 225 million km, Jupiter 5 AU (750 million km), Saturn 10 AU (actually 11 AU, or 1.65 billion km), Uranus just under 20 AU (3 billion km), and Neptune 30 AU or 4.5 billion km.
The distance between earth and any planet varies between the differences and sums of their distances to the sun. To find the minimum distance between Venus and Earth, for example, subtract .75 from 1 (.25) and multiply by 150 million km. The maximum distance between Earth and Venus occurs when they are on opposite sides of the sun, or the sums--1.75 AU = 262 million km. I leave the math to you, but you can create a table in a spreadsheet fairly quickly showing the minimum and maximum planetary distances.
There is no standard, fixed answer as the distances will keep changing all the time as the planets remain in their unique orbits. The minimum and maximum distances will vary as sometimes the planet in question will be on the other side of the solar system (planets distance from sun + Earth distance from sun), while at the minimum distance, the planet will be in alignment with the Earth (Earths distance from sun minus planets distance from sun).
Here is a table to give rough minimum and maximum distances;
PlanetDistance from sun in kmMin distance from Earth in kmMax distance from Earth in kmMercury57,909,17591,688,715207,507,065Venus108,208,93041,388,960257,806,820Earth149,597,890--Mars227,936,64078,338,750377,534,530Jupiter778,412,010628,814,120928,009,900Saturn1,426,725,4001,277,127,5101,576,323,290Uranus2,870,972,2002,721,374,3103,020,570,090Neptune4,498,252,9004,348,655,0104,647,850,790
For a more accurate answer, you would also have to consider that the planets themselves have a minimum and maximum distance rom the sun, its not always exactly the same.
Mercury :35,980,000 miles (57,910,000 km)
Venus :67,240,000 miles (108,200,000 km)
Earth :92,960,000 miles (149,600,000 km)
Mars :141,600,000 miles (227,900,000 km)
Jupiter :483,800,000 miles (778,500,000 km)
Saturn :890,700,000 miles (1,433,000,000 km)
Uranus :1,787,000,000 miles (2,877,000,000 km)
Neptune:2,798,000,000 miles (4,503,000,000 km)
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Jupiter is the 5th planet, at a distance of 779 million kilometres away from the sun.
VENUS
Every planet revolves around the sun, each one taking a different amount of time to complete one revolution. So the distance between Earth and any other planet changes over a wide range, depending on whether we're both on the same side of the sun or on opposite sides.The planet that can be closest to earth when we're both in the same part of our orbits is Venus. The minimum distance between us and Venus is about 25.5 million miles, or about 28% of the distance from earth to the sun.The next nearest possible is Mars, whose distance from Earth can be as small as 48.5 million miles.
The planet furthest away from Earth is Pluto, which is 2 and three quarters of a billion miles away from Earth. Light takes approximately 9 hours to reach us from it. It is the smallest planet in our Solar System, being classified as a 'dwarf planet', and very cold, with a surface covered mostly in either ice or frozen gases.
It will vary from planet to planet but they will all be aligned in a straight line. The distance from Earth to Mars will be about 33,900,000 miles.
Jupiter is the 5th planet, at a distance of 779 million kilometres away from the sun.
mars is the second nearest planet from the earth and the fourth planet from the sun between the earth and mars is 59million kilometres
about 57 million miles away from earth
It is 2.4*1019 kilometres away.
495809480.590840 away that's so far to be the 3 planet away
In the solar system, Earth is the third planet from the sun. Venus is the second planet from the sun. The distance between Venus and the Earth varies as both the planets orbit the sun. For example, the closest the two planets are to each other as they are orbiting is about 42 million kilometres, yet the furthest away these two planets are from each other is about 258 million kilometres.
If by order you mean what order are the planets in, than I can help. The order of the planets is decided by the distance the planets are away from the sun. The planet that is the closest to the sun (Mercury) is reguared as the plaet first in order as its orbit is closest to what we believe may be the centre of our Galaxy. The order is as follows (For extra info I have added the distance away from teh sun each planet is): 1. Mercury (57 milllion kilometres) 2. Venus (108 million kilometres) 3. Earth (150 million kilometres) 4. Mars (228 million kilometres) 5. Jupiter (779 million kilometres) 6. Saturn ( 1.43 billion kilometres) 7. Uranus (2.88 billion kilometres) 8. Neptune (4.5 billion kilomteres) 9. Pluto (5.91 billion kilometres) NOTE: Sometimes Pluto isn't identified as a planet. It can also be known as a dwarf or mino planet. NOTE: During Neptunes orbit, it goes outside of Pluto's meaning that every few thousand years, Neptune is further away than Pluto, but for a majority, Neptune is closer. NOTE: The distance away is based on the average distance.
There are none.
Earth. This is how an astronomical distance is defined, Earths average distance from the sun.
No. Earth is technically the closest planet to the moon. Mars is the closest planet to a moon, with Phobos being only 9.4Mm away from Mars. Earth's moon is an average distance of 370Mm from Earth.
The distance of planet earth from the sun is an average of about 100 times the sun's diameter.
The distance from the sun to the earth is 92,960,000 miles (149,600,000 kilometers).