In which direction? IN the direction perpendicular to the planetary plane it is just plain space. Even in the planetary plane, any point at a distance of 5900 million miles from the sun is empty most of the time.
5900
5900 It is 300 more than 5600 and 300 less than 6200 To find a halfway point (which is also the average), add the numbers together and divide by 2. 5600 + 6200 = 11800 and 11800 / 2 = 5900
9.6 million sq km = 3.707 million sq miles
It is: 250,000 miles
5900
The planet is a planet
Pluto is the answer unless there's an unknown star or planet , Pluto is the closest thing to 5900 miles away from the sun
Pluto
None. The nearest planet to the Sun is Mercury at a distance of 58 million kilometers or 36 million miles.
Anything that close would be burned up Mercury is about 59 MILLION miles from the Sun.
Dwarf planet Pluto is on average 5900 million miles from the sun. It orbit is quite eccentric, sometimes it comes as close as 4437 million miles, at its furthest it is 7376 million miles from the sun.
This is the average distance of Pluto from the sun, though in reality, Plutos distance varies a lot.
5 900 000 000 miles = 9 495 129 600 kilometers Pluto (no longer a planet) is at a distance of 5,945,900,000 km So this planet would have to be out beyond Pluto. As Neptune is the last planet out, the answer therefore has to be there is no planet at 5900 million miles from the sun.
my sloop
No - the distance to the Sun is about 150 million miles, or about 93 million miles.No - the distance to the Sun is about 150 million miles, or about 93 million miles.No - the distance to the Sun is about 150 million miles, or about 93 million miles.No - the distance to the Sun is about 150 million miles, or about 93 million miles.
Average distance from the sun: Mercury: 29.26 million miles Venus: 67.69 million miles Earth: 91.95 million miles Mars: 128.9 million miles Jupiter: 472.3 million miles Saturn: 913 million miles Uranus: 1.866 billion miles Neptune: 2.793 billion miles
Jupiter is about 482 million miles from the Sun.