1 Astronomical Unit = 149,598,000 kilometers.
Mercury - 35,983,610 Venus - 67,232,360 Earth - 92,957,100 Mars - 141,635,300 Jupiter - 483,632,000 Saturn - 888,188,000 Uranus - 1,783,950,000 Neptune - 2,798,842,000 Pluto(may not be a planet) - 3,674,491,000 http://cse.ssl.berkeley.edu/AtHomeAstronomy/act10_datasheet.html IN MILES
6.68*10^-12 au
Exactly in the order in which they're listed in the question.
The average orbital distance of Saturn from the Sun (its semi major axial radius) is-- 1,433,449,370 km (890,700,000 miles) or 9.58 AU. *At Aphelion (Farthest) 1,513,325,783 km (940,337,046 miles) - (10.11 AU)At Perihelion (Closest) 1,353,572,956 km (841,071,241 miles) - (9.04 AU)Light from the Sun takes about 80 minutes to reach Saturn (mean distance is 79.69 light minutes), travelling the nearly 1.5 billion kilometers at 300,000 km/sec.It varies; closer in January, farther in June, but on average, about 92.5 million miles. 1,426,725,400 km
5.2 AU=483,370,616 miles
9 AU = 1,346,380,843 km.9 AU = 1,346,380,843 km.9 AU = 1,346,380,843 km.9 AU = 1,346,380,843 km.
28.74 AU
149.6 million km = 1 AU (rounded)1.6 million km = 0.0107 AU (rounded)
1 AU = 150 million km (approx) so 4.2 AU = 630 million km
150 million km = 1.0027 AU
An astronomical unit is the average distance from the Sun to the Earth; about 150,000,000 km.
In kilometres it's 628,300,000 km
About 4.68 AU
120,536 km - 0.000 805 7 AU120,536 km - 0.000 805 7 AU120,536 km - 0.000 805 7 AU120,536 km - 0.000 805 7 AU
1 au (astronomical unit) is the mean Sun-Earth distance, which is about 150 million kilometers.
1 light year = 9,460,730,472,580.8 km or 63,239.7263 Astronomical Units (AU).
224 397 000 km :)