Where the easiest-to-get-to veins are, if the site will be too inconvenient for the patient (whether they're left or right handed etc...) , fat level at the site (the more fat the less painful the procedure is, but the more difficult it is to hit a vein), how painful the site will be to puncture, whether the site/surrounding area will be needed for other medical procedures, whether there's already a reason a particular site cannot be used (bruising etc...)
abiotic factors of the venus fly trap are the place they live in the climant and were they live in
The environment of the planet Venus is tremendously more hostile to human life or even to human machinery, than the environment of the planet Mars. Venus is much too hot, and too chemically corrosive.
If you only consider gravity, yes. The gravity of Venus is slightly less than that of Earth. Otherwise, no. The surface of Venus is extremely hot and air pressure is extremely high. You would be dead before you could even consider jumping.
Only Venus and Mercury, unless you consider dwarf planets.
I have a cancer sun and a venus in gemini, 7/7/85, and i would consider myself extremely fickle and reluctant to commit. If I'm in a relationship
Consider the Venus fly trap and the environmental stimulus of an insect landing on the trap's leaves and know that plants can respond quite well to environmental stimulus, though not always as blatantly as a Venus fly trap.
One is of how close it is from the sun and I'm trying to figure out the other one myself too.
Venus. It is the second planet from the Sun. Venus is completely covered in dense clouds. These act like a giant greenhouse, raising temperatures to 462°C. Several probes have landed on Venus but none has survived. :) Venus is in fact the hottest planet in our solar system, but it can really get much hotter. Scientists have found exoplanets that exceed the temperatures of venus. There are really a lot of factors. Main ones being how close the planet is to its star and how hot the star itself is.
Sun, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and (if you still consider it a planet) Pluto.
Venus has the highest surface temperature of the 4 terrestrial planets. The gas giants have hotter interiors, but they do not have the same differentiation of surface/atmosphere that the smaller planets do. Venus has the hottest Earth-like location that human technology can currently access, and is especially interesting because of the planet's similarities to Earth in composition and size.
That depends on so many factors on each geographical space, you would have to look this up in google
Venus is exactly the same size as Venus.