Yes! I fact you will be able to see it in the last few hours of the day on June fifth almost everywhere in the world.
Venus will also have an eclipse
That means that the Moon covers Venus in such a way that it temporarily can't be seen from Earth.
The next total solar eclipse visible in Sacramento won't be until December 31, 2252.The next total lunar eclipse will be on December 21, 2010, and will be visible anywhere in North America. However, as a Sacramento resident myself, I need to warn you; December weather in Sacramento is notoriously iffy. There is a fairly good chance of rain or clouds. You might want to take a trip 30 miles east on I-80 to Auburn, CA, which is above most of the low cloud layers here in the valley.Eclipses are shadows. A solar eclipse is the shadow of the Moon on the Earth. A lunar eclipse is the shadow of the Earth on the Moon.
Every forty seven years.
Solar. It's rather grandiose to refer to it as an "eclipse". Venus is so far away that it will just be a speck crossing the Sun, and it will reduce the Sun's light by only an almost immeasurable fraction. It's likely that most people will not even be aware of it. Astronomers generally call it a "transit".
yes you can see Jupiter from venus
To see a total solar eclipse, yes. However, you need only be in the penumbra to see a partial eclipse.
the two planets are venus and mars because the have no moons .
planet venus
You would most likely see a full lunar eclipse
The light from the Sun is partly blocked by Venus in transit. However as Venus has an apparent diameter of about 1/29th that of the Sun, the decrease in light as seen from Earth is minimal. The decrease of the light from the Sun by the Moon in a solar eclipse is almost total as the two bodies appear to have the same diameter. When Venus transits, it blocks such a tiny fraction of sunlight that you only MIGHT be able to see it as a tiny dot with proper solar viewing filters. If you have a telescope with special solar filters (otherwise you will burn out your telescope optics as well as your eyes--like burning ants with a magnifying lens), you can see Venus transit the sun this afternoon (June 5th, 2012).
Yes, did you travel to see the solar eclipse in 2017?