Slightly more or less than 92 million miles.
The farthest distance between Earth and Mercury is when they are on opposite sides of the Sun, which can be up to 221 million kilometers (137 million miles) apart. This phenomenon is known as superior conjunction.
No matter where earth and Neptune are in their orbits about the sun, Neptune will always be the furthest planet from us. The reason is that the distance between Uranus and Neptune is much greater than the distance between the earth and sun.
Aphelion 152,098,232 km Perihelion 147,098,290 km
do you mean when the Earth is farthest away from the Sun? If so, then this occurs at an event called 'aphelion,' when a body is the farthest from its star in its orbit. Recently this has been and will be happening on July 4th. (Note--distance from the Sun has nothing to do with seasons. That is because of our axial tilt.)
The third farthest planet is Saturn. The first farthest is Neptune.
The farthest distance between Earth and Mercury is when they are on opposite sides of the Sun, which can be up to 221 million kilometers (137 million miles) apart. This phenomenon is known as superior conjunction.
The distance between the Sun and the Moon is not related to the temperature on Earth.
2000 feet away
No matter where earth and Neptune are in their orbits about the sun, Neptune will always be the furthest planet from us. The reason is that the distance between Uranus and Neptune is much greater than the distance between the earth and sun.
the tilting of the earths axis with respect to the sun is a much greater influence on the strength of the sun's rays than the distance between sun and earth
the tilting of the earths axis with respect to the sun is a much greater influence on the strength of the sun's rays than the distance between sun and earth
Aphelion 152,098,232 km Perihelion 147,098,290 km
do you mean when the Earth is farthest away from the Sun? If so, then this occurs at an event called 'aphelion,' when a body is the farthest from its star in its orbit. Recently this has been and will be happening on July 4th. (Note--distance from the Sun has nothing to do with seasons. That is because of our axial tilt.)
The third farthest planet is Saturn. The first farthest is Neptune.
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 Earth reaches its greatest distance from the Sun during the summer season in the Northern Hemisphere. Though it may seem counterintuitive, the distance between the Earth and the Sun varies due to the elliptical shape of Earth's orbit, with the Earth being farthest from the Sun during the summer months.
The exact distance between the Earth and the Sun varies with its position in its orbit, which is elliptical. The average distance between the Earth and the Sun is about 93 million miles or about 150 million kilometers. This distance is also called 1 astronomical unit (AU). Around the first week of July (Aphelion - when the Earth is the farthest from the Sun), the distance is about 94.4 million miles or 152 million kilometers. Around the first week of January (Perihelion - when the Earth is the closest to the Sun), the distance is about 91.3 million miles or 147 million kilometers.