1 Astronomical Unit (1.00 AU) is the mean distance between Earth and the sun. 1 AU is approximately equal to 149,600,000 km Saturn's mean distance from the sun is 9.529 AU Saturn's maximum distance from the sun is 10.044 AU Saturn's minimum distance from the sun is 9.014 AU
This question is quite difficult to answer, as the Earth and Neptune's orbits are constantly in progress at different speeds, and vastly different distances from the Sun, which changes the distance between the two objects.
The average distance between the Sun and Neptune is 30.06 AU. The Earth is exactly 1 AU from the Sun, so if all three objects were in conjunction (aligned with each other), with the Sun at the end, Neptune would be approximately 29 AU distant from Earth. If all three were in conjunction with the Sun in the middle, the distance between Earth and Neptune would be just over 31 AU.
We can say, then, that the distance between Earth and Neptune is between 29 and 31 AU, depending on their position relative to the Sun and each other.
The distance between Earth and Mars varies.
At their closest they are about 100 million km apart, while at their most distant they are about 380 million km apart.
The orbit of Jupiter is an ellipse, which means that it's orbital distance varies. At its aphelion, the distance is 5.458 AU (Astronomical Units), and at its perihelion, it is 4.950 AU.
0.38 AU.
An astronomical unit is 149.6 million kilometers, the distance if Mercury to the Sun is 57.9 million kilometers thus:
57.9/149.6=0.38
Mars to Sun closest distance = 128M miles
Mars to Sun farthest distance = 154 M miles
Average distance= 128+154=282 283/2=141
1 AU =93M miles 141/93=1.5
1.5 AU
1 Astronomical unit
20 aus
5.2 AU.
the answer is 5.2 Au .
The distance between Jupiter and Saturn in AU or astronomical units are 4.34 AU. An AU is equivalent to 149,598,000 kilometers. Jupiter and Saturn are outer planets.
Same as Jupiter, since Callisto is a moon of Jupiter.
Mars and Jupiter are separated by an asteroid belt. The distance between them is 3.7 AUs (Astronomical Units). One AU is equal to the distance between the sun and the earth. 1 AU = 150 million kilometers (93 million miles) 3.7 AU = 555 million km (344 million miles) The actual distance from Jupiter to Mars is constantly changing. Use the related link below for the current distance between the two planets.
It varies since both orbit the sun at different rates. One astronomical unit (AU) is the average distance between the earth and sun. Jupiter is about 5 AU from the sun, while Saturn is about 10 AU. The distance between Jupiter and Saturn is 5 AU when they're both on the same side of the sun, and 15 AU when the sun is directly between them. The average distance would be sqr(5² + 10²) AU or about 11 AU.
the answer is 5.2 Au .
The distance between Jupiter and Saturn in AU or astronomical units are 4.34 AU. An AU is equivalent to 149,598,000 kilometers. Jupiter and Saturn are outer planets.
Mercury--0.387 astronomical units Venus--0.723 astronomical units Earth--1.0 astronomical units Mars--1.524 astronomical units Jupiter--5.203 astronomical units Saturn--9.529 astronomical units Uranus--19.19 astronomical units Neptune--30.06 astronomical units Pluto--39.53 astronomical units Please note that these are all mean distances, and the actual distance will vary as to the location of the specific planet in its specific orbit.
Europa varies from roughly 4.9 to about 5.5 astronomical units distance from the Sun. (Because it follows the solar orbit of its primary, Jupiter, and is only a few hundreds of thousands of kilometers from it, this orbit contributes only a tiny fraction of variance from Jupiter's distance from the sun in terms of AUs.)
The distance from Jupiter to Earth is 4.046 astronomical units or 376.1 million miles or 6.053 x 10^8 kilometers.
The distance between neptune and the sun is 15.0935 astronomical units (AU).
1.38
1.49 AU
Light year or astronomical units
It ranges from 5.458104 AU to 5.458104 AU for an average of 5.204267 AU.
Answer: you would have to be specific there are a lot of moons orbitting Jupiter Answer: The distance from Earth to Jupiter's moons is the same as the distance from Earth to Jupiter. The distance from Jupiter to its moons is insignificant, and can be ignored.
Jupiter is 741 million kilometers from the sun (4.95 astronomical units) When earth and Jupiter are the closest to each other, they are 628,743,036 million km apart when they are the most distant from each other, they are 928,081,020 million km apart In astronomical units this varies from 4.2 AU to 6.2 AU