Property:Circumference
From CreationWiki, the encyclopedia of creation science
The circumference of any circle or ellipse is the length that one might measure all the way around it. In astronomy, the circumference of an orbit is the total distance that the orbiting body must traverse to complete one revolution with respect to the stars.
The usual object in view is a planet or a moon, and the primary is either the sun or whatever planet the moon is orbiting. The approved units for displaying planetary distances are AU,km,mi.
Pages using the property "Circumference"
Showing 8 pages using this property.
C | |
|---|---|
| Charon + | 8.24891e-4 AU (123,402 km, 76,678.448 mi) + |
J | |
| Jupiter + | 31.912 AU (4.774e+9 km, 2.96643e+9 mi) + |
M | |
| Mars + | 9.552 AU (1.42903e+9 km, 887,960,328.556 mi) + |
N | |
| Neptune + | 188.925 AU (2.82628e+10 km, 1.75617e+10 mi) + |
P | |
| Pluto + | 188.925 AU (2.82628e+10 km, 1.75617e+10 mi) + |
S | |
| Saturn + | 59.879 AU (8.95777e+9 km, 5.5661e+9 mi) + |
T | |
| Tethys + | 0.0124 AU (1,851,026 km, 1,150,174.232 mi) + |
U | |
| Uranus + | 120.515 AU (1.80288e+10 km, 1.12026e+10 mi) + |

