The radius of Earth is 6,378.1 kilometers, or 3,959 miles. The radius is the distance from the Earth's center to its surface.
The radius of the inner core is 1220 kilometers.
The mean radius (not raduis) is 6,378 km.
6,371 km
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Earth's Circumference at the Equator: 24,901.55 miles (40,075.16 km) Earth's Circumference Between the North and South Poles: 24,859.82 miles (40,008 km) Earth's Diameter at the Equator: 7,926.28 miles (12,756.1 km) Earth's Diameter at the Poles: 7,899.80 miles (12,713.5 km)
The Earth has only about 1.05 times the surface area of Venus, one reason Venus is our twin planet. Venus-12,104 km Earth-12,756 km
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According to NASA, the earth's equatorial radius (not raduis) is 6378.1 km.
The radius (not raduis) is approx 60,268 km.
1,134 km
Apart from the fact that there is no such thing as a raduis, the radius of 9 km depends on what the 9 km measures: the diameter, the circumference or something else.
The mean radii (singular = radius, not raduis!) areMercury = 2,440 kmVenus = 6,052 kmEarth = 6,378 kmMars = 3,397 kmJupiter = 71,492 kmSaturn = 60,268 kmUranus = 25,559 kmNeptune = 24,766 km.
The ratio of the surface areas is (earth's radius/moon's radius)^2 where the radii are in the same units.This gives the answer as 13.40, approx.And, incidentally, the word is radius, not raduis!
The length of a radius (not raduis) is diameter/2.
No, it cannot be a raduis. It cannot be a radius, either.
The radius (not raduis) is 6 inches.
The radius (not raduis) is 1.25 cm.
The radius (not raduis!) is 3.183 cm, approx.
Radius (not raduis) =circumference/(2*pi)