It would depend an the composition of the planet.
The temperature on a planet 1 million miles away from the sun would depend on the planet's atmosphere, composition, and other factors. However, generally speaking, being closer to the sun would result in higher temperatures compared to Earth.
At a distance of 1 million miles from Earth, the Sun would appear much smaller compared to its size in our sky. It would look like a large bright star, but not as large as it appears from Earth.
Mercury is the smallest planet in our solar system and has a rocky, cratered surface. It is located about 36 million miles (58 million kilometers) away from the sun on average, making it the closest planet to the sun.
because ...when you look at the sun it hurts your eyes....and it would be harder to see the planet!
The closest possible opposition distance between Earth and Venus is 38 million kilometers. This is the closest that any planet comes to Earth. The farthest that Venus ever gets from Earth is 261 million km.
The temperature on a planet 1 million miles away from the sun would depend on the planet's atmosphere, composition, and other factors. However, generally speaking, being closer to the sun would result in higher temperatures compared to Earth.
At a distance of 1 million miles from Earth, the Sun would appear much smaller compared to its size in our sky. It would look like a large bright star, but not as large as it appears from Earth.
As a number it is: 2,100,000 miles
Mercury is the smallest planet in our solar system and has a rocky, cratered surface. It is located about 36 million miles (58 million kilometers) away from the sun on average, making it the closest planet to the sun.
miles mannarino is the coolest person on the planet. he has his own channel on youtube. its called timmy1time!look him up he is worth it!
Go up in a balloon and look down, or up a mountain and look across. Even a tall building will do.Or of course, you could look at an object a quarter of a million miles away (the moon), 90+ million miles (the sun - DO NOT LOOK DIRECTLY!), or several trillion miles to brighter stars.
Look in related links, "Planetary Attributes on Wikipedia". The column "Orbital Radius" shows the distance from the Sun, in AU. If you want that in kilometers, multiply the number of AUs by 150 million.
1,000,000
It would be blindingly bright. Resistance from moving through an atmosphere at orbital speeds creates super heated plasma. In this case you would basically have a planet-sized meteor. Considering that a meteor the size of an apartment building appeared brighter than the sun to those twenty miles below it, a whole planet would be unimaginably bright. The amount of heat radiated from such an event would incinerate anyone on the surface below.
At the bottom of the planet it was one large landmass that was breaking apart
it would look awsome put it
Quite amazing: the stack of 60 million 1-dollar bills would be 4.07 miles (6.55km) high! Each US banknote measures 0.11mm thick when new.