Any of the moons of Jupiter.
See related question.
Average distance from the sun: Mercury: 29.26 million miles Venus: 67.69 million miles Earth: 91.95 million miles Mars: 128.9 million miles Jupiter: 472.3 million miles Saturn: 913 million miles Uranus: 1.866 billion miles Neptune: 2.793 billion miles
No, the sun is not billions of miles away. The sun varies in distance between 92 million and 94 million miles away.
146,600,000 kilometers away
The sun is 93 million miles away from the earth.
Earth is about 150 million km or 93 million miles from the sun.
36 million miles Mercury is away from the Sun, on average.
This planet has real prime location. Earth or Terra is the name.
That depends on how fast it was going. -_________________________ You could never get to the Sun in a satellite, because the satellite would be vaporized before you got there. Roughly speaking, nothing solid can survive within a half-million miles of the Sun.
No. About 330 000 Earths would fit inside the volume of the Sun.
The distances are: Mercury: 36 million miles Venus: 67.2 million miles Earth: 93 million miles Mars: 141.6 million miles Jupiter: 483.6 million miles Saturn: 886.7 million miles Uranus: 1,784.0 million miles Neptune: 2,794.4 million miles Pluto (if you still consider it a planet): 3,674.5 million miles
The average distance from Earth to the Sun is about 93 million miles, or 150 million kilometers.
107 million kilometers