milky way galaxy
aka. our galaxy, the same one we r in
:)
Yes. Venus is one of the planets in our solar system, and our Sun (and the solar system) are part of the Milky Way galaxy.
NO, it doesn't. it spins from east to west.It spins in the opposite direction. Most planets (and other bodies) in this galaxy spin clockwise. Venus spins counter-clockwise.
There are eight planets in our solar system (from closest to sun to furthest); Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. R U sure? we are in the Rigel Sector of the galaxy and we're so far away from the Star Wars galaxy... 'sigh'...
Venus ranked third in size when scientists and astronomers still considered Pluto as one of the planets in the Milky Way Galaxy. Nowadays, Venus ranks second in size, after Mercury, just as it is seen on a map of the planets in there specified order (Mercury, Venus, Earth Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune). If the planets were arranged in order from smallest to largest, they would be in this arrangement: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, Jupiter.
Mercury Mars and Venus. Yes and these along with Earth are called the terrestrial planets.
No. Nor does the Earth. Venus and Earth (and the rest of the Solar System) are contained in a galaxy; which of course is the same galaxy in both cases.
Venus is in our solar system and so it is in the same galaxy as we are. We are in the Milky Way galaxy, as are all the stars that you can see.
Yes. Venus is one of the planets in our solar system, and our Sun (and the solar system) are part of the Milky Way galaxy.
Venus is the 2nd Planet in Our Solar System. Our Solar System is in The Solar Neighborhood. The Solar Neighborhood is in The Orion Arm. The Orion Arm is on The Milky Way Galaxy.
Relatively speaking, the distance to Venus compared with the distance across the Milky Way Galaxy is like the distance between the tines of a hair comb in house to the dimensions of a large city. Venus and Earth are both in the Milky Way Galaxy, which is vast. Venus never gets more than 222 million miles away, while the galaxy is some 500 quadrillion (or 500,000,000,000 million miles) from one end to the other.
The hottest planet in the galaxy would be venus. This is because it has a layer of posoinous clouds which traps the suns heat.
Probably not; we only know of a couple dozen planets or so total, yet the galaxy must have billions if not trillions of planets in it.
mercury,venus,earth,jupiter,saturn,uranus,and neptune.
No. Our entire solar system is located within the Milky Way Galaxy. The largest object between Mars and Venus is Earth.
Venus is closest to earths planet size.
the moon, venus, mars, neptune, and the center of the galaxy. o, and sometimes on the top of trees
NO, it doesn't. it spins from east to west.It spins in the opposite direction. Most planets (and other bodies) in this galaxy spin clockwise. Venus spins counter-clockwise.