Hey what you doing
Yes and it is too close to the sun to go to
Never. Or, if it ever does, once. Venus is in a stable orbit around the Sun, and it would take a titanic force to cause Venus to fall into the Sun.
Saturn. This is untrue. Both Mercury and Venus have shorter orbits and therefore take less time to orbit the Sun, because they are the two planets closer to the Sun then Earth. Saturn is further from the Sun and takes much longer to orbit it.
Venus goes around the sun once every 0.615 Earth years, or once every 224.7 Earth days. Venus travels at an average speed of 78,341 miles per hour or 126,077 kilometers per hour in its orbit around the sun.
it takes 277.7 earth days
Planet Venus cannot leave its orbit by itself. A sufficiently close encounter with a object of sufficient mass will perturb its orbit. If the object is large enough and close enough, Venus (or any planet) could leave the orbit of the Sun.
It takes Venus 224.7 days to orbit the sun. Venus orbits the sun 1.62 times in a year. Venus is the planet 2nd closest to the sun.
It takes 140 days more for the earth to go around the sun than Venus!
Venus doesn't go around the moon! =P
Sorry; you JUST missed it! For the past few months, Venus has been the "Morning Star" rising before the Sun. But Venus is too close to the Sun to be visible now (December 27, 2009) and is about to go behind the Sun. By the middle of February, 2010, Venus will become the "Evening Star" setting just after the Sun does. By the first week in March, 2010, it should be easily visible in the west right after sunset.
Mercury and Venus are closer to the Sun than Earth. As a result, they have a shorter way to travel, for a complete orbit around the Sun. Besides, they also go faster - this is also related to their smaller distance from the Sun.
Looking at the Sun and Venus from galactic north (in the vicinity of Polaris) Venus revolves around the Sun in a counter-clockwise direction with a period of 224.7 Earth days. Using the same reference point, Venus rotates on its axis in a clockwise, or retrograde, direction, with a period of 243 days.