1,392,000 km that's 864948.70 miles
to give you an idea of perspective the earth is 12756 Km that's 7926.21.
You could fit 109 earth side by side across the diameter of the Sun.
the sun dosent move across the sky
The "ecliptic". In truth, the Sun doesn't move; the apparent motion of the Sun across the sky is caused by the Earth spinning, and the apparent motion of the Sun across the "celestial sphere" is caused by the Earth orbiting the Sun. But the plane of the Earth's orbit around the Sun is what causes the apparent motion of the Sun across the celestial sphere, so the "ecliptic" is actually the plane of the Earth's orbit.
The Sun doesn't: "move across the sky" Earth revolves around the Sun which is why it appears to "move across the sky".
Big. Very big.
The Big Dipper appears in different positions throughout the night and across different seasons due to the Earth's rotation and orbit around the Sun. As the Earth spins on its axis, the stars, including the Big Dipper, seem to move across the sky. Additionally, as the Earth orbits the Sun, the angle from which we view the stars changes, causing their positions to shift gradually over the course of the year. This combination of rotation and orbital movement results in the Big Dipper's varying positions in the night sky.
Male Sun bear's claws can be as long as 5 inches and their paws can be as wide as 5 inches across.
One AU is the distance between Earth and the Sun. No planet is that big across so you can only be talking about distance from the sun and in that case Earth by definition has an astronomical unit.
the sun dosent move across the sky
The sun is about 15,000 km big
The sun actually is very big.
the earth rotates giving the illusion of the sun moving across the sky
The "ecliptic". In truth, the Sun doesn't move; the apparent motion of the Sun across the sky is caused by the Earth spinning, and the apparent motion of the Sun across the "celestial sphere" is caused by the Earth orbiting the Sun. But the plane of the Earth's orbit around the Sun is what causes the apparent motion of the Sun across the celestial sphere, so the "ecliptic" is actually the plane of the Earth's orbit.
The Sun doesn't: "move across the sky" Earth revolves around the Sun which is why it appears to "move across the sky".
very big
the earth rotates giving the impression of the sun moving across the sky
Big. Very big.
The Big Dipper appears in different positions throughout the night and across different seasons due to the Earth's rotation and orbit around the Sun. As the Earth spins on its axis, the stars, including the Big Dipper, seem to move across the sky. Additionally, as the Earth orbits the Sun, the angle from which we view the stars changes, causing their positions to shift gradually over the course of the year. This combination of rotation and orbital movement results in the Big Dipper's varying positions in the night sky.