The Earth has a diameter of about 12700 kilometers (7900 miles).
The sun has a diameter of about 1.39 million kilometers (865000 miles).
Its diameter is about 109 times the diameter of earth.
The formula for volume of a sphere is V=(4/3) πr3
The approximate volume of the Sun is then 1.3 x 106 times the approximate volume of the Earth.
It would take approximately 1.3 million Earth-sized objects to fill the volume of the Sun.
(*More precise measurements would have to define the surface, i.e. include or exclude the outer layers of the Sun. The Sun is not perfectly spherical and has no "solid" surface.)
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Saturn is much larger than Earth. You could fit 764 Earths inside Saturn based on volume.
Approximately 57 Earths could fit inside a hollow Neptune, taking into account its volume which is about 57 times larger than Earth's.
Approximately 1.3 million Earths could fit inside the Sun. The Sun's diameter is about 109 times larger than Earth's, and its volume is about 1.3 million times greater.
The Earth's lithosphere can vary in depth from 5 km at the ocean ridges to 200 km underneath mountain ranges.
Earth's magnetic poles have reversed many times in the past due to changes in the Earth's molten outer core. As the molten metal moves, it generates the Earth's magnetic field. Over time, this movement can cause the magnetic field to weaken, flip, and establish a new polarity. The process of pole reversals is a natural part of the Earth's geophysical history.
Approximately 63 Earths could fit inside Uranus, as Uranus has a diameter about 4 times that of Earth.
Saturn is much larger than Earth. You could fit 764 Earths inside Saturn based on volume.
The Earth is larger than the moon, and therefore only a fraction (1/50) of the Earth would theoretically "fit" inside the space of the moon. Therefore, 50 moons could fit inside the Earth.
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Approximately 57 Earths could fit inside a hollow Neptune, taking into account its volume which is about 57 times larger than Earth's.
earth could fit inside Jupiter 1,300 times.
Well, darling, Sirius is about twice the size of our dear old Sun, and the Sun could fit about 1.3 million Earths inside it. So, if we do the math (which I'm sure you could handle), Sirius could fit around 2.6 million Earths inside it. But hey, who's counting? Just know it's a whole lot of Earths.
Neptune is about 3.88 times larger than the Earth, so about 58.5 Earths could fit inside Neptune.
Approximately 1.3 million Earths could fit inside the Sun. The Sun's diameter is about 109 times larger than Earth's, and its volume is about 1.3 million times greater.
1 billion Earths
approximately 109 earths would fit around the circumference of the sun
According to NASA, Saturn has a volume 763.5 times the volume of the Earth. So, by volume, some 763 and a half Earths could fit into Saturn. (Saturn is the least dense major planet, and has a mass only 95.2 times that of the Earth.)