An astronomical unit is, by definition, the mean distance of the Sun to the Earth, which is
about 149 500 000 kilometers. I guess you can make the multiplication yourself to get the answer.
5,865,696,000 miles = 63.102 Astronomical Units
Light years and astronomical units are both units of distance.
Astronomical Units, parsecs, light years, take your pick.
149,000,000 kilometers = 0.99600262 Astronomical Units
Radar was reflected off the surfaces of nearby planets whose distances are known in astronomical units.
38 astronomical units is about 5,684,719,086 kilometers.
4 astronomical units = 371,822,485 miles
0.82 astronomical units is 122,670,254 kilometers.
39.5 astronomical units equate to about 5,909,115,892 kilometers.
Sedna's average distance from the sun is about 86 Astronomical Units.
Mercury--0.387 astronomical units Venus--0.723 astronomical units Earth--1.0 astronomical units Mars--1.524 astronomical units Jupiter--5.203 astronomical units Saturn--9.529 astronomical units Uranus--19.19 astronomical units Neptune--30.06 astronomical units Pluto--39.53 astronomical units Please note that these are all mean distances, and the actual distance will vary as to the location of the specific planet in its specific orbit.
it does not exist.
1 AU
less than 1 au
29.76 astronomical units is how far away Neptune is from the Sun. An astronomical unit is the average distance of the Earth from the Sun, set at 93 million miles. Venus is .72 astronomical units from the Sun. Taking 29.76 and subtracting .72 shows us that Neptune is 29.04 astronomical units from Venus. Approximatey. On average. And can greatly vary due to eccentricities in orbits.
300 million kilometers or 185,911,242 miles (rounded).
1.93 astronomical units is 288,723,890 kilometers.