no will never no. <who ever said that needs a brain!
This one is pretty simple.
The circumference of the earth at the equator is 24,901.55 miles (40,075.16 kilometers). Through the Poles it is shorter.
Simply half the circumference eg - 12450.775 Miles.
The equator is the center of the earth's surface which is an equal distance from each pole. The poles are points on both sides of the earth which supposedly create the magnetic field around the earth.
If your toolbuttons are visible there is a ruler up there which you can use to measure between two points. You can also create a path and GE will tell you how long the path is.
The distance can range between 893 million and 964 million kilometers apart.
1,607,000,000 miles --------------------- Around the Vernal Equinox(es) (beginning of Spring) of the following few years (starting from 2010), the distance between Earth and Uranus will be approx. 20 + 1 = 21 A.U. Around the Autumn Equinox(es) (beginning of Autumn) of the following few years (starting from 2010), the distance between Earth and Uranus will be approx. 20 - 1 = 19 A.U. Around the end of June/beginning of July of the following few years (starting from 2010), the distance between Earth and Uranus will be approximately 20 A.U. Around the middle/end of December of the following few years (starting from 2010), the distance between Earth and Uranus will be approximately 20 A.U.
The gravitational force (or attraction) between any two objects increases as the distance between them decreases. Thus, as an asteroid approaches Earth, the Earth's gravitational pull will increase as it gets nearer.
Every so-called "great circle" is (more or less) the longest circumference of the Earth that includes any two points. The great circle includes the shortest distance between the two points for travel along the Earth's surface.
"Distance" is defined between TWO objects, or points in space.
The two points and the centre of the earth define a plane, and the intersection of this plane with the surface of the earth is a circle - the "Great Circle". The shortest distance between the two points is the smaller of the two arcs on this circle.
Between their closest points it is a distance of about 7400 miles according to Google Earth.
The distance between two points is the distance between them. It doesn't depend on the method an object uses to move between the two points. It also doesn't depend on what route an object follows between them, or even whether or not anything moves between the two points. The distance between the earth and the Orion Nebula is the distance, even though no object has ever moved between the earth and the Orion Nebula.
You first measure the distance between the points as shown on the map, then you compare that measurement with the map scale.
Aphelion
Given the following approximate radii for Earth and mars orbits: Earth = 149,598,261 km Mars = 227,939,150 km The shortest distance between the two is the difference between the two, which yields 4minutes 21seconds for radio to go that distance. The longest distance between the two is the sum, which yields 21minutes.
stratosphere
It is simply called the distance between the two points - simple as that. How that distance is measured will depend on the nature of the surface on which the two points are located as well as on the metric for measuring distance that is defined on that space.The common metric in Euclidean space is the Pythagorean distance while on the surface of a sphere (like the Earth, for example), distances are measured along the great arc.
The pacific ocean
distance between the earth and the sun.