Yes
Venus is much brighter than Mars. Only the Moon and the Sun are brighter than Venus.
the moon ,Venus, the space station, rainbows, clouds
No. As seen from Earth the "evening star," which is actually the planet Venus, is the second brightest object in the night sky. Only the moon is brighter.
Venus can appear the brightest but it is not always so, Jupiter's brightness varies much less and is rather bright (brighter than when Venus is not at its peak)
In 1967, the USSR sent Venera 4 into space to probe the planet Venus. This was followed by Venera 5 in 1969 and Venera 6 in 1969. The US sent the Pioneer Venus 2 to probe Venus in 1978.
9 Venera probes were sent to Venus by the Russians but there is no space station
one example is the Hubble Space Telescope. it has six gyroscopes:three to stay on balance and three are spares
Venus.
Venus is much brighter than Mars. Only the Moon and the Sun are brighter than Venus.
Venus is occasionally brighter than jupiter
The brightest OBJECTS in the sky, after the Sun, are the Moon, followed by planets Venus, Jupiter, and Mars (on rare occasions, Mars is brighter then Jupiter), followed by the star Sirius.The brightest stars proper are Sirius, followed by Canopus, Toliman, Arcturus, Vega...
Venus, at its brightest, is brighter than any other planet. However, when it's not at its brightest, there are a couple of others than can be brighter if they're near their brightest, Mars and Jupiter being the most notable.
Mercury is hotter than Venus and Venus is brighter than Mercury
Because it is nearer that the stars.
the moon ,Venus, the space station, rainbows, clouds
Venus, when it's at its brightest, is brighter than any other planet. At any given time, though, which planet is brightest can vary; it's often Venus, but a reasonable fraction of the time Mars and Jupiter give Venus a run for its money.
100000000 times earths light