No
Mars is not always the same distance from the sun because it has an elliptical orbit. If it had a perfectly circular orbit, then it would always be the same distance from the sun.
No. Mercury was once believed to be tidally locked to the sun, meaning it rotates once for every orbit so that the same side always faces the sun. Closer observation found that Mercury is not tidally locked.
The average distance from the sun to Mercury is approximately 57.9 million kilometers or 36 million miles.
Mercury is the closest planet to the sun. Mercury's orbit is not a perfect circle, so its distance from the sun varies. The minimum distance from the sun to Mercury is 28.5 million miles. The maximum distance is 43.5 million miles.
Mercury is always the closest planet to our sun.
Mars is not always the same distance from the sun because it has an elliptical orbit. If it had a perfectly circular orbit, then it would always be the same distance from the sun.
Varying from the the distance from the Earth to the Moon + the distance from the sun to the earth + the distance from mercury to the sun, to the distance from the earth to the sun - the distance from mercury to the sun - the distance from the earth to the moon
The distance between earth and mercury depends on whether mercury is on the same side of the sun or the opposite side!
Both Mercury and Earth are orbiting the Sun. At some time they are on the same side of the sun and at others they are on opposite sides of the Sun. Thus the concept of an average distance between them is almost meaningless as it is constantly changing.The average distance of Mercury from the Sun is 57,909,100 km.The average distance of Earth from the Sun is 149,597,887 km.
No.
The orbit of Mercury is elliptical. This means that its orbit travels the path of an ellipse, and isn't always the same distance from the Sun. When Mercury makes its closest approach to the Sun, astronomers call this perihelion. So, the perihelion of Mercury is 46 million kilometers (29 million miles), or 0.307 astronomical units (1 AU is the distance from the Sun to the Earth). The furthest point of a planet's orbit is called the aphelion. So in the case of Mercury, its furthest point stretches out to 70 million km (44 million miles), or 0.466 astronomical units.
No. Mercury was once believed to be tidally locked to the sun, meaning it rotates once for every orbit so that the same side always faces the sun. Closer observation found that Mercury is not tidally locked.
The distance form Mercury to the Sun is not constant because Mercury's orbit is not a perfect circle. The average distance is 35,980,000 miles.
The average distance from the sun to Mercury is approximately 57.9 million kilometers or 36 million miles.
Mercury is the closest planet to the sun. Mercury's orbit is not a perfect circle, so its distance from the sun varies. The minimum distance from the sun to Mercury is 28.5 million miles. The maximum distance is 43.5 million miles.
Mercury is always the closest planet to our sun.
The distance is 36,000,000 miles from the Sun.