No planet so far observed or detected is that far from the Sun.
The furthest planet so far observed is Neptune at about 30 AU.
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.
The planet that is about 30 AU (astronomical units) from the sun is Neptune. Neptune is the eighth and farthest known planet from the sun in our solar system.
Uranus is around 19 AU from the sun, theres no planet that is 1.9 AU from the sun. the closest to this is Mars, at 1.5 AU.
Venus is 0.723332 AU (semi-major axis) from the Sun.
Mercury averages around this distance from the sun.
Venus is the second planet from the Sun, orbiting at a distance of .72 AU. It has no natural satellites.
The planet 5 AU from the sun is Jupiter.
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.
Venus is .72 AU's away from the sun.
Jupiter is roughly 5.2 AU from the sun.
The planet that is about 30 AU (astronomical units) from the sun is Neptune. Neptune is the eighth and farthest known planet from the sun in our solar system.
Venus is .72 Au(astronomical units) from the sun
Astronomical units (AU) is a unit of measurement equivalent to the distance between the Earth and the Sun. Thus, Earth is 1 AU from the Sun. Other planets in our solar system are at varying distances from the Sun, with Mercury at about 0.39 AU, Venus at about 0.72 AU, and Mars at about 1.52 AU.
Mars of course.....
Uranus is around 19 AU from the sun, theres no planet that is 1.9 AU from the sun. the closest to this is Mars, at 1.5 AU.
Venus is 0.723332 AU (semi-major axis) from the Sun.
Earth is 1 AU from the Sun. There is no planet at an orbit of 2.5 AU. (Mars orbits at 1.5 AU and Jupiter at 5.2 AU).