About twice a year Venus is 50 million miles from the Earth. Once a year Mars comes within the 50 million mile range.
Mars has a minimum of 33.9 million miles away from Earth (consider the orbital path!) and a maximum of 250 million miles away. On average, it is about 140 million miles away. However, the closest planet is Venus. With the closest to Earth being only 23.6 million miles away, and the farthest being 162.2 million miles away!
Planet classification of this sort is only a Star Trek invention. It does not exist in science. "M-class" presumably denoted a planet suitable for earthlings....or Vulcans...or whatever. So the answer is....right here. ............. dude what he meant is simply what is the nearest planet that we know of.....aside from earth.... that may have a possibility of being m-class (by the term rich with water and in the "Goldilocks" zone) by what i have see in a recent set of documentaries they think the nearest planet like that may be 20 light years away... which in the scale of our galaxy inst really too far away XD
The distance from earth and the sun is not in billions. It is around 150 million km away (93.20567 miles).Sometimes this changes because of our orbit which is elliptical, not circular, thus the variation. This is also called'1 Astronomical Unit'.
The furthest planet from Earth in the Solar System that we know of is Neptune. The furthest planet from Earth, period, is a moving target. If I were to name one, probably sometime next week another exoplanet would be discovered that was even further away, so it really doesn't make a lot of sense to even attempt to answer that.
The moon is drifting away from earth at a rate of about 38 millimeters per year. So in 1 million years, the moon will have drifted another 38 kilometers or abour 24 miles further from Earth.
The planet Maris is 33.9 million miles away from the planet Earth. The planet Jupiter is 365 million miles away from Earth.
This planet has real prime location. Earth or Terra is the name.
about 57 million miles away from earth
The planet Saturn was relatively close to Earth on December 31, 2003, when it was about 746 million miles away. It is some 900 million miles away from the sun.
93 million miles
Mars has a minimum of 33.9 million miles away from Earth (consider the orbital path!) and a maximum of 250 million miles away. On average, it is about 140 million miles away. However, the closest planet is Venus. With the closest to Earth being only 23.6 million miles away, and the farthest being 162.2 million miles away!
Our one. Which is an oblate spheroid one. Put down an answer only if it is correct...
is some 900 million miles away from the sun.
Mercury: 35.9 million miles. Venus: 67.2 million miles. Earth: 93 million miles. Mars: 141.6 million miles. Jupiter: 483.7 million miles. Saturn: 885.9 million miles. Uranus: 1.8 billion miles. Neptune: 2.8 billion miles.
Venus is 25 .8 million miles from the Earth while Mercury is 48 million miles and Mercury is 57 million miles. The sun is 93 million miles away and Jupiter is 390 miles from the Earth. Saturn is 777 million miles away while Uranus is 1.6 billion miles away. The farthest planet is Neptune at 2.7 billion miles.
No planet could survive at 93 miles away - much too close. Its Earth that is about 93 million miles from the sun on average.
Venus is the closest planet to earth. It's only 26 million miles away from earth. In perspective to the sun, which is 93 million miles away from earth. The distance to Venus varies because planets move relative to each other as they orbit the Sun. 26 million miles is, roughly, the nearest Venus gets to Earth. The planet Venus is about 42 million kilometers (26 million miles) from Earth at its closest point and about 258 million kilometers (160 million miles) away at its most distant point.