Neptune and Uranus.
It would be Pluto and Neptune but pluto is no longer a planet it is a dwarf planet
The speed of a planet is fastest when it is closest to the sun in its orbit (option 1) and slowest when it is farthest from the sun (option 2). This is because of the gravitational pull of the sun, which accelerates the planet as it gets closer and decelerates it as it moves away.
Neptune and Mercury are the two planets that are the farthest away from each other in our solar system. Their orbits are on opposite ends of the solar system, with Neptune being the farthest planet from the Sun and Mercury being the closest.
From 1930 (when Pluto was discovered) to 1978, Pluto was the most distant planet. In 1978, Pluto slipped inside Neptune's orbit. Neptune was the farthest planet from 1978 to 1999, and Pluto (which has a fairly high eccentricity) was farther away from 1999 to 2006. In 2006, the International Astronomical Union "demoted" Pluto from Planet to Dwarf Planet, meaning that Neptune is once again the most distant planet.
Pluto was relegated to "Dwarf Planet" status in 2006, but irrespective of planetary status, it is still a body orbiting our sun. Pluto (Dwarf planet) is about 5,913 million km from the sun (on average). Earth is about 150 million km from the sun. Venus is about 108 million km from the sun. Mercury is about 58 million km from the sun. Depending on your definition of a planet, Pluto is easily the furthest but, if you insist that Pluto is no longer a planet, then it must be Earth.
Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn --------- Uranus Neptune (Pluto) as these days Pluto is no longer considered a planet, apparently.
The speed of a planet is fastest when it is closest to the sun in its orbit (option 1) and slowest when it is farthest from the sun (option 2). This is because of the gravitational pull of the sun, which accelerates the planet as it gets closer and decelerates it as it moves away.
NO it is the first planet away from the sun
Planet Uranus is about 3 billion kilometers from the sun at its furthest point in its orbit. At its closest point it is about 2.5 billions kilometers away.
neptune is 2 billion miles from the sun neptune is 2 billion miles from the sun
Neptune and Mercury are the two planets that are the farthest away from each other in our solar system. Their orbits are on opposite ends of the solar system, with Neptune being the farthest planet from the Sun and Mercury being the closest.
From 1930 (when Pluto was discovered) to 1978, Pluto was the most distant planet. In 1978, Pluto slipped inside Neptune's orbit. Neptune was the farthest planet from 1978 to 1999, and Pluto (which has a fairly high eccentricity) was farther away from 1999 to 2006. In 2006, the International Astronomical Union "demoted" Pluto from Planet to Dwarf Planet, meaning that Neptune is once again the most distant planet.
1 - The Earth as Pluto is no longer a planet but a dwarf planet.
Pluto is the coldest planet because it is the furthest planet away from the Sun.
Pluto was relegated to "Dwarf Planet" status in 2006, but irrespective of planetary status, it is still a body orbiting our sun. Pluto (Dwarf planet) is about 5,913 million km from the sun (on average). Earth is about 150 million km from the sun. Venus is about 108 million km from the sun. Mercury is about 58 million km from the sun. Depending on your definition of a planet, Pluto is easily the furthest but, if you insist that Pluto is no longer a planet, then it must be Earth.
2 kilometers away from the sun hahahaha........ but this is just a joke LOL hahahahahahaha................................................................................... :)
Neptune, the furthest planet from the sun.
Neptune, the farthest planet away from earth in our solar system is 4.3 billion kilometers from earth. The planet OGLE-05-390L b orbits a star about 6000 parsecs... about 20000 light years from earth. They're finding planets around other stars almost weekly... So that may change. The farthest (galaxy) we know of is a quasar whose light has been traveling for 12 billion years. That object is now about 27 billion light years from us. Since the universe is about 15 billion years old... That's as far as we can see back in time. The light from anything much further away wouldn't have had time to get to us.