If your starting point was the sun, you would pass Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and then Saturn.
i think you would pass Jupiter and Saturn if you are coming from the diriction from the sun
i would think alot of them but i dnt exaclt knw......................
Probably none. Depending on the relative positions of the Earth and Mars, your trip might take you vaguely close to Venus.
You will not pass any planets on the way from Venus to Earth because both planets are right next to each other, except if you count Venus and Earth as passing from one to the other.
From Earth:MarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptune (However, because of the orbit of Pluto, you could encounter Pluto before Neptune)
Triton
Uranus is a gas giant (or "ice giant"). The general consensus is that they don't actually have surfaces per se; the gases making up their atmosphere likely merge imperceptibly with the liquid interior (there may, or may not, be a more solid "metal" core... to an astronomer, "metal" means "anything other than hydrogen or helium").
So var, the only spacecraft to visit the planet Uranus was the Voyager 2 mission. It made a fairly close pass by Uranus on January 24, 2986.
mars, jupiter, saturn, uranus, neptune
You would only pass Venus, since the solar system begins with the sun, and ends with Pluto. The full sequence is the sun, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto.
Mars
The orbits of Mars, Jupiter and Saturn are between Earth and Uranus. However, it depends on where in their orbits they actually are at the time as to whether you would pass them. If Uranus was on the same side of the sun as us, and the others were on the other side, although we would cross their orbits, we might not actually pass them. It is also possible, depending on where Uranus is at the time, that we might even have to pass through the orbits of Venus and Mercury if we were doing a direct route to Uranus and it was on the other side of the sun.
planets don't pass the sun, they orbit the sun. If you are asking from the vantage point of earth, then all planets outside the orbit of earth's will not appear to pass the sun. These are Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, Uranus.
If you were starting from Earth - Mars and Jupiter.
The planets that are further from the Sun than Earth is, can never be in inferior conjunction with Earth. So they would be Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Pluto and Ceres, are dwarf planets, but can't be in inferior conjunction with us either. Only Venus and Mercury can be.
There aren't any known planets between Mars and Earth.
You will not pass any planets on the way from Venus to Earth because both planets are right next to each other, except if you count Venus and Earth as passing from one to the other.
From Earth:MarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptune (However, because of the orbit of Pluto, you could encounter Pluto before Neptune)
Just about the entire solar system! Assuming your starting point is Earth, you would pass Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune before reaching Pluto.
Triton