No, it is not.
Earth is 1 AU from the sun. Saturn is 9.5 AU from the sun. The sun is always closer to the earth than Saturn. When the earth and Saturn are on the same side of the sun, the difference between them is 8.5 AU. When they are on opposite sides, the distance is 10.5 AU. Saturn always ranges from 8.5 to 10.5 AU from the earth, whereas the sun is never more than 1 AU away.
There are four planets closer to Earth than Saturn in our solar system. These are Mercury, Venus, Mars, and Jupiter.
Mercury and Venus are closer to the sun than we are. (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune)
Saturn and Mercury are 1,375,000,000 kilometers apart. Mercury is much closer to the sun than Saturn is to the sun. The planet Earth is the third closest planet to the sun.
Mercury is closest. Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.
Mercury has a shorter travel time by jet from Earth compared to Saturn. This is because Mercury is much closer to Earth in terms of distance. Traveling to Saturn would take significantly longer due to its much greater distance from Earth.
The question is ambiguous. It could mean "closer to Earth than to Saturn". Also it could mean "closer to Earth than Saturn is". Fortunately, the answer is the same in each case:There are four such planets : Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter.The distances between planets depends on where they are in their orbits.Fortunately, that doesn't affect this answer.I wonder if the question was really about what planets are between Earth and Saturn. If that is the case, the answer is 2: Mars and Jupiter.Four: Mercury, Venus, Mars, and Jupiter.
The planet which is immediately closer to the Earth than Saturn is Jupiter. The sequence of planets, starting with the one closest to the sun, is Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.
the neighboring element of MERCURY is thallium
Answer: Yes, Mercury is the first planet in line closest to the sun, followed by Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Planets orbiting closer to their sun tend to move a lot faster then planets further out. This case is no exception Mercury has a year of 88 Earth Days, and Saturn has a year of 10,832 Earth days.