Mercury- 57,000,000 miles from Earth
Venus-23,700,000 miles from Earth
Earth-0 miles from Earth
Mars- 35,000,000 miles from Earth
Jupiter- 500,000,000 miles from Earth
Saturn-746,000,000 miles from Earth
Uranus-1,687,000,000 miles from Earth
Neptune-2,680,000,000 miles from Earth
Pluto-94.5 million miles from Earth
No, the diameters of all the planets in our solar system cannot fit between the Earth and the Moon. The average distance from the Earth to the Moon is about 384,400 kilometers, while the combined diameters of all the planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune) is approximately 120,000 kilometers. This means there is enough space for the planets to fit, as their total diameter is much less than the distance to the Moon.
Neptune is the remotest of the eight planets, and its distance is 30 astronomical units, which means its distance from the Sun is 30 times the Earth's distance from the Sun.
The average distance between Earth and Mercury is around 77 million kilometers. However, since both planets have elliptical orbits, this distance can vary significantly depending on their positions in their respective orbits.
The distance between the inner planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars) is comparatively smaller than the distance between the outer planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune) in our solar system. The inner planets are closer to the Sun and each other, while the outer planets are much farther apart due to the gap between the terrestrial and gas giant planets.
The distances between inner planets are relatively close compared to the distances between outer planets. For example, the distance between Earth and Venus is around 25 million miles on average, while the distance between Earth and Mars can vary from 34 million to 250 million miles due to their elliptical orbits.
No, not numerically, not massively, not in distance. Not in any way I can think of.
number the planets farthest to closest to earth
Neptune is the remotest of the eight planets, and its distance is 30 astronomical units, which means its distance from the Sun is 30 times the Earth's distance from the Sun.
In order of their distance from the sun, the rocky planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars.
The inner planets listed in order from closest to the sun are Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. They are called the inner planets because they are all within 1.52 AU of the Sun, whereas the Jovian planets are at a distance of 5+ AU. One AU is equal to the average distance between the Sun and the Earth or 93,000,000 miles.
The circumference of a planet is the distance round their widest part. On earth, it is measured round the equator.
No, all the planets, including the Earth, orbit the Sun.
All planets rotate. Even earth.
There is no definitive answer, as these distances constantly change. See the answer toHow far apart are each of the planets?How_far_apart_are_each_of_the_planets
Venus and Mars
urn
All of the planets in our Solar System are less than a light year away, but no other planets around other stars are within that distance.