149,598,000km, 92,955,887Miles
or one A.U.
That would be the Earth's distance from the Sun (at aphelion) plus the Earth-Moon distance. The latter is insignificant.
The distance from the sun to the star Vega is roughly 25.3 light years.
One Astronomical Unit is the mean distance between the Sun and the Earth.
To determine how many trips from Hastings to Wellington would equal a trip to the sun, we first need the distance of each journey. The distance from Hastings to Wellington is approximately 300 kilometers, while the average distance from Earth to the sun is about 149.6 million kilometers. Dividing the distance to the sun by the distance between Hastings and Wellington, you would need roughly 498,667 trips to equal one trip to the sun.
The relationship between the sun's gravitational pull and the distance from the sun varies according to the square of the distance. Mercury is an exception. The theory of relativity becomes involved as well as Newton's law of gravitation. We will not go into that.
The distance of earth from the sun is about 93,000,000 miles
true
the sun moves around the eath not the eath moves around the sun by falaby66
1 Astronomical Unit or 1AU is the average distance between the Sun and the Earth. It is approximately 149,598,000 km.
The seasons change NOT because the Earth rotates, but because of our revelution around the sun. It is summer when the northern hemisphere is tilted toward the sun. the seasons have nothing to do with the distance to the sun. the Eath is closest to the sun in winter.
eath to monn
Galileo
No. The Sun is stationary, while the Earth rotates around the Sun. So the Earth is a satellite to the Sun.
365 and a quarter
365 and a quarter
On the average, about 365.25 days. Exactly the same time it takes the Earth to go around the sun, otherwise a great distance would open up between Earth and the moon.
none because the eath isn't a planet