Jupiter is 5 times as far away from the Sun as Earth, Saturn is 10 times as far.
The mean distance from the Earth to the Sun is generally given as 93 million miles. This distance is also known as an Astronomical Unit (AU) and is used in calculations of distances between other objects in our solar system.
The gravitational force between two objects decreases with the square of the distance between them. Since the distance from the Sun to Earth (1 AU) is 10 times closer than the distance from the Sun to Saturn (10 AU), the gravitational pull of the Sun on Earth is (10)^2 = 100 times stronger than on Saturn.
The average distance between Jupiter and Earth is about 484 million miles (778 million kilometers), with the distance varying due to the elliptical orbits of both planets. Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and Earth is the third planet from the Sun.
Pluto orbits the sun at an average distance of about 5.9 billion kilometers, while Earth is around 150 million kilometers away from the sun. This makes Pluto's average distance from the sun significantly farther than Earth's.
Saturn, Its mean distance is 9.53 AU, where one AU (Astronomical Unit) is the earth to sun distance.
An angstrom is a unit of measurement used to express atomic and molecular distances, equal to 0.1 nanometers. An astronomical unit is a unit of length roughly equal to the average distance from the Earth to the Sun, about 149.6 million kilometers. Thus, the two units are used to measure vastly different scales - angstrom for atomic distances and astronomical units for distances on the scale of our solar system.
It is in scientific notation: 9.3*10^7
An angstrom is a unit of length equal to one ten-billionth of a meter, commonly used to measure atomic distances. An astronomical unit is a unit of length based on the average distance between the Earth and the Sun, approximately 93 million miles, often used to measure distances within our solar system.
Jupiter is 5 times as far away from the Sun as Earth, Saturn is 10 times as far.
The astronomical unit (AU) is a convenient unit but it's not an SI unit, so be careful if you use it in calculations. Be sure to check all the units for consistency.1 AU is the semi-major axis length of Earth's orbit around the Sun and is roughly 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers.Another interesting unit is the light-minute. This is the distance light will travel in space in one minute. 1 AU = 8.3 light-minutes = 500 light-seconds. It takes light about 500 seconds to travel from the Sun to Earth.
The density of radiation per unit area is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the source. Trust me on this. So if the distance from the sun increased by a factor of 10, the present solar constant would decrease by a factor of 102 = 100.
The mass of the Sun can be determined using Kepler's Third Law of Planetary Motion, which relates the period of a planet's orbit to its distance from the Sun. By knowing the period of Earth's orbit (1 year) and its average distance from the Sun (1 astronomical unit), we can calculate the Sun's mass to be approximately 1.989 x 10^30 kg.
In my opinion Pluto, has an average distance from the Sun of 5.913 x (10 to the 9th power) km. Earth has an average distance from the Sun of 150,000,000 km.
The average distance from the earth to the sun is approx 1.5*10^11 metres.
Neptune is about 30 times further from the sun than Earth is.
93 x 10*6 miles