Mars and Jupiter - and Ceres if you want to include Dwarf Planets
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.
Yes - Mercury and Venus Venus and Earth Mars and Jupiter Jupiter and Saturn Saturn and, Uranus and Neptune and Pluto
The planets are either inner or outer planets. There are 8 planets. And of those eight planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars are the inner planets. While: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are the outer planets.
If you were starting from Earth - Mars and Jupiter.
Saturn orbits the Sun like the other planets, it does not orbit anything else. One orbit for Saturn takes 29.4571 Earth years.
mercury,venus,earth,jupiter,saturn,uranus,and neptune.
In our solar system there are 4 planets larger than Earth, which are collectively known as the gas giants; these are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. There are many other planets larger than Earth in other solar systems as well.
Well the order of planets from the sun is mercury Venus earth mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune so the two closest planets from earth would be Venus and mars! Hope this helped
earth, and mercury are closest. planets in order: sun mercury, venus, earth, mars, Jupiter, Saturn, uranus, neptune Pluto
mercury venus earth mars Jupiter Saturn uranus neptune Pluto :)
Till today, there have been no reports of life found on other planets other than Earth.
Venus and Mercury are between the Earth and the Sun. Mars is between the Earth and the asteroid belt, and Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune are on the other side of the asteroid belt from the Earth.