The distance between Earth and Uranus is constantly changing, as is the distance between any two planets in our solar system. This is because all the planets are orbiting the Sun at different speeds and at different distances from it. Uranus is about 19 times further from the Sun than Earth at any given time, but we are not always in a straight line. Uranus takes about 84 years to orbit the Sun.
About 547,098,132 km
Because the solar system is in constant motion, the distance between Earth and Uranus changes daily. The closest the two get is 1.6 billion miles (2.6 billion kilometers). At their farthest, they are separated by 1.98 billion miles (3.2 billion km).
At its closest point, Uranus is 1,607,000,000 miles from Earth.
very far
For all practical purposesUranus is just as far from Earth's moon as it is from the Earth.
Uranus is one of the gas giants, but is not as big as some of the other gas giants, like Jupiter. Earth is far, far smaller than Uranus.
The planet Uranus is nearly 1.5 billion miles from Earth. It is also around 2 billion miles from the sun.
9990 million kilometers(768 miles)
No a visit to Uranus sounds dangerous. Uranus is far from the sun, so it would be cold. There is a reason it is not habitable and earth is.
So far no life on any planet but earth.
2,570 million miles
It takes 84.01 earth years for Uranus to go around the sun once.
No. The only place where the are buildings is Earth. Uranus does not have a solid surface to build anything on and is too far away for us to go too.
Uranus is classified as a gas giant; it is much larger than Earth, composed mostly of gas, and is much farther away from the sun, and hence much colder. As far as we can presently tell, there is no life on Uranus.