The astronomical unit (AU) is often used to describe distances in space and its approximate value is 1.5 x 108 km. The light-year (ly) is also used in order to discuss much larger distances and its approximate value is 9.46 x 1012 km. A third measure is called the parsec (pc), its value is 3.09 x 1013 km.
The astronomical unit is the average distance between the Earth and sun. The light-year is how far a beam of light would travel in one year (in a vacuum of course). The parsec is a little more complex so I'm going to attempt to simplify it. If you were at a distance where the sun and Earth (one AU apart) looked to be 1/3600th of a degree from each other you would be one parsec away from them.
A planet's maximum distance from the Sun is known as its aphelion. This point occurs when the planet is at the farthest point in its elliptical orbit around the Sun. The distance between the planet and the Sun is greatest at aphelion.
An anomaly refers to the position of a planet or satellite that is defined by its angular distance from its last perihelion. It is considered an irregularity in the motion of a planet or satellite.
The maximum distance from the sun in a planet's orbit is called its aphelion. This point is farthest from the sun, as opposed to the perihelion, which is its closest point.
All the planets orbit in a perfect circle, so they always stay the same distance from the sun, except Pluto, which is why it is now a "Dwarf Planet".
To convert a planet's distance from the sun to Earth units, you can use the astronomical unit (AU) as a standard unit of measurement. 1 AU is approximately the average distance from the Earth to the Sun, which is about 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers. You can calculate the distance from the sun to a planet by expressing it in AU based on this conversion.
A planet's maximum distance from the Sun is known as its aphelion. This point occurs when the planet is at the farthest point in its elliptical orbit around the Sun. The distance between the planet and the Sun is greatest at aphelion.
A planet's farthest point from the sun in its orbit is called aphelion. This is when the planet is at its greatest distance from the sun.
There is no planet called Jupisaturn.
it is hydrogen peace
Aphelion is the point in a planet's orbit where it is farthest from the sun. This is when the planet is at its greatest distance from the sun in its orbital path.
That's called its 'perigee'.
perihelion
An anomaly refers to the position of a planet or satellite that is defined by its angular distance from its last perihelion. It is considered an irregularity in the motion of a planet or satellite.
The maximum distance from the sun in a planet's orbit is called its aphelion. This point is farthest from the sun, as opposed to the perihelion, which is its closest point.
That point is called aphelion. The related term for an object orbiting around a planet or other non-sun object is apogee.
Aphelion
All the planets orbit in a perfect circle, so they always stay the same distance from the sun, except Pluto, which is why it is now a "Dwarf Planet".