About 80 million km, the same (strangely enough) as the distance from Earth to Mars.
This assumes of course, in terms of the Earth's and Mars' orbits around the Sun, that both are in line with each other and on the same side of the Sun (which doesn't actually happen that often).
Out of these the moon is the smallest and the sun is the largest.
This question can not be awnsered because it is a moon not a planet which means that moons are all changing in distance from the sun but planets stay the the same distance from the sun
The average distance between the moon and the sun is 150 million kilometers.
It is 988462374 million kilometers from the sun.
The average distance from the Earth to the Moon is about 238,855 miles (384,400 kilometers), while the average distance from the Earth to the Sun is about 93 million miles (150 million kilometers). This means the Sun is approximately 390 times farther away from the Moon than the Moon is from the Earth. Therefore, the Sun is roughly 390 times the distance from the Moon as it is from the Earth.
From the Sun: about 150 million kilometers. From the Moon: about 380,000 kilometers.
The moon's average distance from the sun is exactly the same as the Earth's ... about 149,597,870 kilometers.
This moon of Uranus is about 2870 million kilometers from the Sun.
The Earth and the Moon are an average of 384,000 kilometers apart. The Sun is always more than 350 times farther from either the Earth or the Moon, and usually more than 400 times as far. The Earth-Moon system orbits about 150,000,000 kilometers from the Sun. The Earth-Moon distance is between 362,570 and 405,410 kilometers. The Moon-Sun distance is between and 146,688,000 and 152,508,000 kilometers.
From Frankfurt, Germany to Zagreb, Croatia it is 450.49 miles or 724.97 kilometers.
The conversion factor is 150 million kilometers per AU.
Out of these the moon is the smallest and the sun is the largest.
The Sun is at a distance of about 150 million kilometers from Earth; the Moon is at a distance of about 380,000 kilometers from Earth.
True. The Sun is much closer to Earth than the Moon. The average distance from the Earth to the Sun is about 93 million miles (150 million kilometers), whereas the average distance from the Earth to the Moon is about 238,855 miles (384,400 kilometers).
Mars is 267,000,000 kilometers away from the sun.
It's about a quarter million miles greater or less than the distance of the earth to the sun. That's because at times the moon is "between" the earth and the sun and is closer to the sun, and at other times the moon is on the "far side" of the earth from the sun. The distance to the sun from earth varies from about 147 million to 152 million kilometers. The moon is from about 363,000 to 405,000 kilometers from the earth. The distance from the earth to the moon isn't much when compared to the distance to our local star.
This question can not be awnsered because it is a moon not a planet which means that moons are all changing in distance from the sun but planets stay the the same distance from the sun