Yes. With millions of miles to spare. Unfortunately, it would destroy life on Earth.
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The Sun regularly comes between the Earth and Venus. Because the two planets orbit the Sun at different speeds, sometimes Venus is on the opposite side. Life continues on Earth as per normal.
Venus is only very slightly smaller than the Earth. The Earth is 10.83×1011 km3 compared to Venus' 9.38×1011 km3. To find out how times Venus goes into Earth you just divide the volume of the Earth by the volume of Venus. Like this: 10.83×1011/9.38×1011 =~ 1.15 times. That's between one and one seventh and one and one sixth.
None, because Venus is smaller than Earth, even if they are twins. However, 1 Venus can fit into Earth, but it would leave almost no room, because Venus is only slightly smaller than Earth.
Not many, considering that the Earth is larger than Venus.
No. Venus is only a little bit smaller than Earth.
You could fit around 30 Earths in between the Earth and the Moon. This distance is about 384,400 kilometers.
More than 1,500,000 Venus's could fit in the volume of the Sun. That is to say, the volume of the Sun is about 1.5 million times the planetary volume of Venus. (About 1.3 million Earths would fit in the Sun.) Sun volume = 1.412 x 1017 km3 Venus volume = 9.38 x 1011 km3
The Sun is 113 times larger than Venus. You could fit around 1,442,897 Venus's inside the Sun
The Earths orbital distance from the sun is 149,597,890km (92,955,820 miles) on average, enough to fit 107 more suns between the suns surface and Earth.
It is not possible for a human to fit inside a Venus Flytrap's trap hence a human could not be killed and digested by it.
The Sun is around 113 times larger than Venus. You could fit about 1,443,000 Venus' inside the Sun.
0.3 Zero earths point three
1,000,000 earth's could fit in the sun