Neptune's orbit has a mean radius of 30 AUs. The Earth's orbit has a mean radius of 1 AU, which is how an AU is defined, so 1 AU is much smaller than Neptune's orbit.
The orbit of Pluto is about 39 times further away from the Sun than Earth's orbit. Pluto's average distance from the Sun is about 39.5 astronomical units, while Earth's average distance is about 1 astronomical unit.
Eris is 97 astronomical units away from the sun. ( an astronomical unit is the average distance between Earth and the Sun)
164.8 Earth years
Yes, Jupiter is about 5 times as far from the Sun.
neptunes orbit time of the sun is 164.79 years to orbit the sun neptunes orbit time of the sun is 164.79 years to orbit the sun
No, it is a normal orbit with an average radius of 30.06 astronomical units. Apart from Venus Neptune has the most nearly circular orbit, and those two planets are the only ones with an eccentricity factor less than 0.01.
neptunes orbit time of the sun is 164.79 years to orbit the sun neptunes orbit time of the sun is 164.79 years to orbit the sun
well the orbit is about 59,000000000 km ( 3km455666674x34km
Neptunes
in 2006
The orbit of Pluto is about 39 times further away from the Sun than Earth's orbit. Pluto's average distance from the Sun is about 39.5 astronomical units, while Earth's average distance is about 1 astronomical unit.
Eris is 97 astronomical units away from the sun. ( an astronomical unit is the average distance between Earth and the Sun)
164.8 Earth years
An astronomical unit is the average distance from Earth to the sun, so on average, the Earth is one astronomical unit away from the sun. The earth's orbit around the sun is not a perfect circle, so Earth is not always the exact same distance from the sun. The Earth is usually a little farther or a little closer to the sun, depending on where Earth is in its orbit.
Mercury has the smallest orbit, and Neptune has the largest orbit in our solar system. This is determined by the average distance of each planet from the Sun. Mercury's average distance is about 0.39 astronomical units (AU), while Neptune's average distance is about 30.07 AU.
Most are from the Kuiper belt, beyonf Neptunes orbit. There are currently five official dwarf planets. Four of them are around or beyond Neptunes orbit, but there is one in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, called Ceres.
Yes, Jupiter is about 5 times as far from the Sun.