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.
Going to the sun is farther. :)
No. No two planets have the same size orbit. Mars orbits the sun at more than twice the distance that Venus does.
No single city has that title. There are no cities on Mars. The nearest city on Earth to Mars will change as Earth rotates so that the same side of Earth does not always face Mars. It makes little difference, though, because Earth is tiny compared to the distance between planets.
The rotation of Phobos is Synchronous meaning ''Existing or occurring at the same time.''
Earth is about 93 million miles from the Sun. Mars is about 139.5 miles from the Sun. The distance between Earth and Mars depends on where each is in its orbit. At their nearest, they would be about 46.5 million miles; at their farthest, about 232.5 million. The moons of Mars are much closer to Mars itself than these distances from Mars to Earth of the Sun. So since we are rounding off distances to the half-million miles, for all practical purposes Mars and its moons are the same distance from Earth.
No, it ranges in distance from 249,209,300 km to 206,669,000 km.
The moon is closer to the sun. Since the moon orbits Earth, it is always about the same distance from the sun as Earth is.
It is about the same distance from Denton to Mars as it is from Earth to Mars, given that Denton, Texas, remains on earth at the present time. The earth/mars distance varies as these bodies orbit the sun. Sometimes they are both on the same side, and the distance between is minimized. Sometimes they are on opposite sides of the sun, and the distance is maximized. The average distance is roughly 3 astronomical units.
Going to the sun is farther. :)
No. No two planets have the same size orbit. Mars orbits the sun at more than twice the distance that Venus does.
Constantly varying.Phobos orbits Mars, so the average distance to Phobos will be the same as the average distance to Mars, which is about 225 million kilometers.
An angle has no distance and so there is no angle which is the same distance apart.
Same as Earth. The distance from Earth to Mars is insignificant in comparison to the distance scales in the Milky Way. - About 20,000 light-years.
No single city has that title. There are no cities on Mars. The nearest city on Earth to Mars will change as Earth rotates so that the same side of Earth does not always face Mars. It makes little difference, though, because Earth is tiny compared to the distance between planets.
Mars is about 80 million km away from the moon, the same (strangely enough) as the distance from Earth to Mars. So, not really. Although I guess it depends on your scale.
Parallel lines are always the same distance from each other and never intersect.
The perpendicular distance between two parallel lines is always the same.