Distance can't be measured in time units unless we know the speed. At the speed of light, the Sun is about 8 1/3 light minutes from Earth. At US interstate highway speed, it's a very long time indeed (at 100 kilometers per hour, it would take you over 170 years to get there).
24 hours
Venus has an average distance from the Sun that is about 108% of Earth's distance. This makes Venus the planet closest to having a distance from the Sun that is 150% of Earth's distance.
Neptune takes about 165 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun. This long orbital period is due to its distance from the Sun, which is about 30 times farther than Earth's distance.
Because it only takes 8 minutes for sunlight to reach Earth, but it takes 4 hours to reach Neptune.
The distance between the Sun and the Earth is 1 AU (149.597 m km / 93 m miles) whereas the distance between the Sun and Venus is at an average of 0.723 AU (108. 200 m km / 67.625 m miles). So it can be called 72% of the Sun-Earth distance.
24 hours
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
distance earth from the sun
Venus has an average distance from the Sun that is about 108% of Earth's distance. This makes Venus the planet closest to having a distance from the Sun that is 150% of Earth's distance.
No, the moon and the sun are not the same distance from Earth. The average distance from the Earth to the moon is about 238,855 miles, while the average distance from the Earth to the sun is about 93 million miles.
An AU, or astronomical unit, is defined as the average distance from Earth to the Sun. Therefore, the distance from Earth to the Sun equals 1 AU.
The distance to the sun is one astronomical unit (AU). The earth-sun distance is the basis for the AU.
The average distance from the Sun to the Earth is one "astronomical unit" or "AU".
it is about 92 million miles from the earth to the sun at its closest distance.
It varies - the moon orbits the Earth so the distance will change depending on Earth's distance from the sun as well as the moon's distance from the Earth. The minimum distance from the moon to the sun is when the Earth is closest to the sun and the moon is in new moon phase (meaning its closer to the sun than the Earth). The distance from the moon to the sun is: Earth's distance at perihelion - moon's distance from Earth at apogee. This works out to 146,692,370 km. The maximum distance from the moon to the sun is when the Earth is farthest from the sun and the moon is in full moon phase. The distance from the moon to the sun is Earth's distance at aphelion + moon's distance from Earth at apogee. This works out to 150,503,400 km.
I think you mean the distance from the Earth to the Sun. This distance is measured in Astronomical Units (AU)
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.