Venus has perpetual very thick cloud layers, so on the surface there would be no visible sunrise.
If the clouds were somehow removed, then there would be a sunrise, but because Venus rotates so slowly (and in the wrong direction) it would be a bit different than an Earthly sunrise.
Venus spins on its axis very slowly as compared to the rest of the planets. The time from one sunrise to the next sunrise on Venus is about 117 days on Earth.
Venus is one of the brightest it reflects 11x the amount the moon reflects u can c venus around sunrise and sunset
Venus. This season, in January 2011, Venus _is_ the Morning Star. Go outside before sunrise and look east; except for the Moon, Venus is the brightest thing there.
You can see it as a bright ''star'' in the sky, near the horizon. Venus is currently the "evening star" or "morning star" and will be visible either shortly before sunrise or shortly after sunset, depending on the calendar date.
The answer is NOT Venus. It is MERCURY. Venus takes longer to spin once than does Mercury. However Venus spins in the opposite direction to Mercury. The result is that Mercury has the longest "sunrise to sunrise" times.
Venus spins on its axis very slowly as compared to the rest of the planets. The time from one sunrise to the next sunrise on Venus is about 117 days on Earth.
Both Mars and Venus are visible in the East before sunrise. Venus is brighter, and more white colored; Mars is higher, a little dimmer, and distinctly reddish.
Because Venus spins west to east unlike Earth which spins east to west.
Because Venus spins west to east unlike Earth which spins east to west.
You can before sunrise and after sunset because it is close to the sun
Early morning, just before the onset of sunrise
Near sunrise and sunset.
Close to sunrise and sunset.
A Venus day (spin) is 1.08 times as long as a Venus year.The very slow rotational day of Venus is 243 Earth days long, while its year (one orbit of the Sun) is only about 225 Earth days. Combined with the retrograde direction of its spin, this produces a "solar day" (sunrise to sunrise) of about 116.75 Earth days.So in terms of rotation, there is only 0.925 days in a Venus year. In terms of daylight experienced on the surface, there are 1.92 Venus days per Venus year.
No, in October 1985 Venus was visible in the morning before sunrise - it was therefor a 'morning star' at that time not an 'evening star'
Venus is one of the brightest it reflects 11x the amount the moon reflects u can c venus around sunrise and sunset
Venus. This season, in January 2011, Venus _is_ the Morning Star. Go outside before sunrise and look east; except for the Moon, Venus is the brightest thing there.