Pluto is (usually), but it's only a "dwarf planet".
No planet is further from the Sun than Neptune in our solar system. Neptune is the eighth and farthest known planet from the Sun.
Neptune, the furthest planet. Its is around 30 AU from the sun, while Jupiter is 5.2 AU.
The planets that are farther from the Sun than Earth are (in this order): * Mars * Jupiter * Saturn * Uranus * Neptune and sometimes Y, er, I mean the Dwarf Planet Pluto. (It's 'sometimes' because Pluto's orbit brings it closer to the Sun than Neptune part of the time [most recently for 20 years ending in 1999] which is one of the reasons why it was reclassified as a Dwarf Planet.)
Neptune and Pluto are the only planets in our solar system that are further away from the sun than Uranus. Neptune is the eighth planet from the sun, while Pluto, although now classified as a dwarf planet, has a highly elliptical orbit that takes it even farther from the sun than Neptune at certain points in its orbit.
Neptune is almost four times as farther from the Sun than Jupiter. To put this into scale Jupiter is roughly five times further from the Sun than the Earth. Which means Neptune is almost twenty times further from the Sun than Earth is.
No planet is further from the Sun than Neptune in our solar system. Neptune is the eighth and farthest known planet from the Sun.
Uranus
No, neither is it even a planet. It is further away from the sun than Neptune.
Neptune, the furthest planet. Its is around 30 AU from the sun, while Jupiter is 5.2 AU.
The planets that are farther from the Sun than Earth are (in this order): * Mars * Jupiter * Saturn * Uranus * Neptune and sometimes Y, er, I mean the Dwarf Planet Pluto. (It's 'sometimes' because Pluto's orbit brings it closer to the Sun than Neptune part of the time [most recently for 20 years ending in 1999] which is one of the reasons why it was reclassified as a Dwarf Planet.)
Neptune is the farthest planet from the sun in our solar system.
Neptune's orbit is more elliptical than Pluto's, causing their orbits to sometimes intersect. From 1979 to 1999, Neptune's elliptical orbit brought it closer to the sun than Pluto, making Neptune the farthest planet from the sun during that time.
Saturn is 9.54 A.U from the sun (1AU= Earth's distance from the sun)
Neptune and Pluto are the only planets in our solar system that are further away from the sun than Uranus. Neptune is the eighth planet from the sun, while Pluto, although now classified as a dwarf planet, has a highly elliptical orbit that takes it even farther from the sun than Neptune at certain points in its orbit.
Neptune is almost four times as farther from the Sun than Jupiter. To put this into scale Jupiter is roughly five times further from the Sun than the Earth. Which means Neptune is almost twenty times further from the Sun than Earth is.
Yes, Neptune is the farthest planet from the sun.
Neptune is almost 79 times further away from the Sun than Mercury.