Your question is incomplete, but here are some possible answers. If you are asking what units the distance (note spelling) from the Sun to Uranus is typically given in, there are several answers, primarily "AU" (Astronomical Units, the average distance from the Earth to the Sun), kilometers (km), or miles. If you are asking what the distance from the Sun to Uranus is, then here are the answers in each of the units mentioned above (these all describe the same distance): Minimum distance: 2.7 billion km, 1.7 billion miles, 18.3 AU Maximum distance: 3 billion km, 1.87 billion miles, 20.12 AU
uranus
The planet Uranus
19.13 AU
it is the 7th planet from the sun
Uranus is a planet and the sun is a star. The sun is very very hot but Uranus can be very cold. The sun is very big but Uranus is not as big as the sun. The sun is in the center of the solar system but Uranus is not.
A year on Uranus, also known as its orbital period, is equivalent to about 84 Earth years. Uranus takes this long to complete one full orbit around the Sun due to its distant location in our solar system.
No. The sun is the sun of Uranus. Saturn is a planet, not a sun.
Uranus is the 7th planet of the sun.
No. Uranus is the 7th from the sun. Neptune is the 8th from the sun.
Uranus is the 7th planet of the sun.
Uranus is the 7th planet of the sun.
Uranus is the seventh planet from the sun in our solar system.