254 days by the most fuel-efficient orbit, IIRC. Distance doesn't matter as much as travel time, and Mars is pretty close.
No. The orbit of Venus is closer to Earth's orbit than the orbit of Mars, by an average of 38 million kilometers (Venus 108 million km, Earth 150 million km, Mars 230 million km)Mars is only the closest planet to Earth when Venus is on the opposite side of the Sun from Earth and Mars is on the same side as Earth and Mars is not too far ahead or behind the Earth in their orbits.It can be as long as an entire Earth year that Mars is not closer, and it will only be closer for less than 4 months at a time.
Mars is farther from the Sun than the Earth. The requirements to develop life on Mars were far less than on the Earth which had, at the time of the planets' formation, the ideal conditions to develop life.
venus on the sun's side and mars on the other side that is far from the sun.
The distance between Mars and other planets in our solar system varies depending on their positions in their orbits. On average, Mars is about 225 million kilometers (140 million miles) away from Earth, which is the closest planet to Mars. The distances between Mars and other planets can range from tens of millions to billions of kilometers.
1year
The nearest Mars gets to the Earth is 56 million kilometres. At 60 mph it would take 66.2 years to get to Mars in a straight line. At its furthest, Mars is more than 7 time as far so a straight line journey would take around 475 years.
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Mars is 36,000,000 miles from Earth and no Mars is the fourth planet from the sun(Mars is right beside us) Sun.......... Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto
Mars is 48.7 million miles from Earth, on average.
250 million miles far from earth
254 days by the most fuel-efficient orbit, IIRC. Distance doesn't matter as much as travel time, and Mars is pretty close.
It takes time for radio (and light too) to get from place to place. We know how long it takes, because we know its speed. The speed is 186,282 miles per second. Once we know the distance it has to cover, we can figure out how long that will take. Here are some examples: From the moon to the Earth . . . 1.28seconds From the sun to the Earth . . . . 8minutes 20seconds From Mars to Earth, when they're as close together as they can get . . . . 3minutes 10seconds (one way) From Mars to Earth, when they're as far apart as they can get . . . . . . . . . 22minutes 11seconds (one way) From the nearest star outside the solar system . . . over 4 years .
Usually Earth is the closest planet. At times when Mars and Venus are both "in opposition", meaning that they are on the far side of the Sun from the Earth, then Venus would be closer to Mars.
No. The orbit of Venus is closer to Earth's orbit than the orbit of Mars, by an average of 38 million kilometers (Venus 108 million km, Earth 150 million km, Mars 230 million km)Mars is only the closest planet to Earth when Venus is on the opposite side of the Sun from Earth and Mars is on the same side as Earth and Mars is not too far ahead or behind the Earth in their orbits.It can be as long as an entire Earth year that Mars is not closer, and it will only be closer for less than 4 months at a time.
36million over to 250million
because mars is earth like and there are aliens on mars because years ago in the America the scientist have a robot inn video camera then it go far far far then it gone,,then the scientist know thhat there are aliens