They are about the same size and are close in proximity.
What do you mean? You can always draw a line from Earth to Venus. Or between any two points.
Not if you were on the surface of Venus. Venus has a very dense atmosphere which would mean you wouldn't see any planets or stars. You might just be able to make out the shape of the Sun but not very well.
Venus is not on any particular side of the earth. It is inside the orbit of the earth and consequently closer to the sun.
A Venus flytrap is a plant that lives on Earth, and a remora is a fish that lives in the ocean. They do not have a relationship of any kind.
When Venus is farthest from the Sun and Earth is at its closest, the distance between Venus and Earth can be as low as 39.5 million kilometers (23.6 million miles). The average distance between the planets' orbital distances is 41.4 million kilometers or about 25.7 million miles.Because the planets orbit at different speeds, the distance at any given time will be much larger, up to a maximum of about 261 million kilometers.
venus and mars
On the surface of Venus, the acceleration of gravity, and therefore the weight of any object, is 90.3 percent of what it is on the surface of Earth.
Because all of the planets are orbiting the SUN, the distance between Earth and the other planets are always changing. Take Venus, for example. Right now, Venus is between the Sun and Earth, so the distance to Venus is only about 40 million miles. In about 8 months, when Venus is on the other side of the Sun from us, the distance will be more like 130 million miles. There is a free planetarium program called Stellarium that you can download and install, which will allow you to calculate the distance from Earth to any other planet or moon.
The distance between the planets can even vary at different oppositions. The closest possible opposition distance between Earth and Venus is 38 million kilometers. This is the closest that any planet comes to Earth. (The point when the planets are at their closest approach to each other is called opposition).
No. No one has stepped on Mercury, Venus, or any planet aside from Earth.
There are no moons around Venus or Mercury. So the closest moon to Venus is the Moon orbiting the Earth, which is not really any closer than Earth is. (Venus is always at least 100 times farther away from Earth than the distance of the Moon.)
I'm not sure what "first" means in this context. Venus can be closer to Earth than any other planet, and Venus can be brighter than any other planet, but it's not so all the time.