They are lovers. In the U.S. dub they are supposed to be viewed as cousins, but are actually lesbians.
Neptune, Uranus, Saturn and Jupiter are never seen as crescents from Earth. They are always "almost full".
The planets are always moving as they orbit the sun, so this answer keeps changing. For example, when Uranus and Neptune are on the same side of the sun, and Jupiter is on the opposite side, then Uranus and Neptune would be closest. However, if Neptune were on the far side of the sun, then Uranus and Jupiter would be closest. When Uranus and Neptune are at their closest, they're separated by (rough numbers) about 9 AU. When Uranus and Jupiter are at their closest, they're separated by (again, roughly) 13 AU. However, while Uranus and Neptune can be closer together than Uranus and Jupiter can, they can also be further apart.
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, (Pluto..... It will always be a planet to me!)
you might think it is sailor moon, but it is actually sailor Venus. Remember how Serena (Usagi for Japanese) always played sailor v games. Sailor v is sailor Venus and was found by Artemis (another talking cat like Luna).
One important reason is that it's always at least twice as far from us.
Uranus was discovered by William Herschel on March 13, 1781, 229 years ago. Neptune, however, was first observed on September 23, 1846, only 164 years ago. Of course they had been in the solar system for a few billion years. It's just that they weren't in our model of the solar system, until discovered.
It was never the furthest planet. Neptune was always there.... Uranus the furthest planet to be observed between 1781 and 1846.
The pattern of the solar system will always be Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune. Earth will always have life and be the third planet.
Not really; Neptune has its axis (its poles) tilted at 28o which is very similar to the Earth's tilt of 23o. Perhaps you are thinking of the planet Uranus which has its axis tilted 98o , which means that one of its poles is always pointed almost directly toward the Sun and the other pole is pointed toward the outer Solar System. This means that roughly one half of Uranus is always sunlit and the rest is always in darkness, which fits the word "sideways" pretty well.
No. Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune are always further from the Sun then Earth is. Neptune is the furthest. (For Pluto fans, Pluto when it was regarded by the IAU as a planet was sometimes "furthest". But even then, it's orbit was so eccentric that sometimes Neptune was.)
Many ancient Greeks considered Uruanus to be primordal, that he was never born and always existed. According to Cicero, Uranus was the child of Aether (air) and Hemera (day); In the Orphic Hymns, Nyx (night) is the mother of Uranus rather than Hemera
i want the anwser Comment: Unfortunately there isn't an exact answer. These planets orbit the Sun at different speeds and the distance between them is always changing.