Difference between revisions of "Astronomical Unit"

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(Fixed error: Mars is 1.5 AU not 2.5 AU from sun. Added table.)
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==Distances to objects in solar system==
 
==Distances to objects in solar system==
  
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| Oort Cloud || ~2,000 to ~5,000 AU  
 
| Oort Cloud || ~2,000 to ~5,000 AU  
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Revision as of 14:15, 22 September 2024

An astronomical unit (AU) is the average distance between the Earth and the Sun. It is defined as exactly 149,597,871 km, and equals approximately 8 light-minutes. The unit is most commonly used to measure distances within our and other solar systems.[1]

Mars is about 1.5 AU from the Sun, which means it is 1.5 times the distance from the Earth to the Sun, or approximately 224 million km from the Sun (149,597,871 km • 1.5).

The distance from Earth to Mars varies from a little under 0.5 AU, to 2.5 AU, depending if the Earth is on the same side of the Sun as Mars, or we are far apart with the Sun between us.

Distances to objects in solar system

Distances in the solar system
Body Distance to Sun
Sun 0 AU
Mercury 0.4 AU
Venus 0.7 AU
Earth 1.00 AU (by definition)
Mars 1.5 AU
Ceres 2.77 AU
Asteroid Belt ~2 to ~4 AU
Jupiter 5.2 AU
Saturn 9.6 AU
Uranus 19.2 AU
Neptune 30.0 AU
Pluto 39.5 AU
Kuiper belt ~30 to ~50 AU
Haumea 43.2 AU
Quaoar 43.6 AU
Eris 67.8 AU
Sedna 489 AU
Scattered disk ~100 to ~1,000 AU
Oort Cloud ~2,000 to ~5,000 AU

References

  1. McClure, Brian. 2017. “What Is an Astronomical Unit?” EarthSky. October 23, 2017.