34,646,418 miles
Mars is an average of about 140 million miles away from Earth. However, this distance can vary due to the elliptical shapes of their orbits.
Mars' closest planet is Earth. On average, the distance between Earth and Mars is about 225 million kilometers (140 million miles), but this can vary depending on their positions in their respective orbits around the Sun.
the Earth The Earth is the closest planet to Mars. During the period of their orbits, Mars is 34 million mi (55 million km) away from the Earth at their closest and 249 million mi (400 million km) at their farthest to each other. Just for comparison, Mars gets within approx. 304 million mi (490 million km) to Jupiter at their closest. Interestingly enough, Jupiter is so far away from Mars that, at all times, Mars is closer to Mercury than it is to Jupiter.
On average, Mars is about 225 million kilometers (140 million miles) away from Earth. In terms of distance from the sun, Mars is about 228 million kilometers (142 million miles) away on average, as it orbits the sun in an elliptical path.
The Earth is 1 AU from the Sun while Mars is 1.52 AU from the Sun so the distance from Earth to Mars varies from 1.52-1 to 1.52+1 AU, which is quite a range. To put AUs into miles multiply by 93,000,000.
93,000,000 miles,or in Scientific Notation:9.3 *10 miles.
The mean distance is 3.844*10^5 kilometres.
1year
As far as it is possible to tell, neither of the two are in scientific notation.
As far as we know, we only use scientific notation here on Earth, for the computing of very large numbers (like the distance between planets) or very small numbers (like the radius of a hydrogen atom).
The average distance from Earth to the Sun is approximately 1.496 x 10^8 kilometers.
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Mars is 36,000,000 miles from Earth and no Mars is the fourth planet from the sun(Mars is right beside us) Sun.......... Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto
Mars is 48.7 million miles from Earth, on average.
It is not necessary, but it is far easier to work with very small or very large numbers if you use scientific notation. For example, to calculate gravitational attraction between the earth and some object, you need to use the mass of the earth in the equation. It is far simpler to use 5.972*104 kilograms rather than 5,972,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilograms. It is easy to make a mistake in the long form.
When? Mars and Earth are constantly moving, so the distance between them is constantly changing. If you're really interested, it would be trivial to look up their relative distances from the sun, and figure out how far apart they can ever be (if they're both on opposite sides of the sun) or how close they can ever get (if they're both on the same side of the sun). I'm not going to do that for you, though, because I would hate to spoil your joy of discovery.
250 million miles far from earth