Uranus has two astronomical symbols. The first proposed in 1784, is â™… . It represents a globe with the letter H (for Herschel, who discovered it) above it
A later symbol was a mix of the symbols for the Sun (circles with a dot at its centre, and Mars (circle with an arrow pointing outward. So it is a dotted circle with an arrow pointing upwards.
10000000000000000
6.833 × 10^13 km^3
1.787 x 10^9 miles
Uranus is, on average, about 2.87 billion kilometers from the Sun. In scientific notation, this distance can be expressed as approximately (2.87 \times 10^9) kilometers.
It has no scientific name. It was named Pluto and that was that.
About 19.13 A.U. (Astronomical Units). That's just the average distance of course.
Average distance about 2869 million kilometres. That's about 19.13 "Astronomical Units".
It is 8.9*10^-5 in scientific notation
It is "(scientific notation)".
This number in scientific notation is 9.8x10-5.
It is: 2.7*10^0 in scientific notation
The scientific notation for 89,450 is: 8.945 × 104