Mars and Venus at most, yet they haven't many similarities.
23.6 degrees
It's Venus at the moment, but depending on positions in orbit sometimes mars or mercury could be closer.
No, Earth and Mars are not the same planet. They are two separate planets in our solar system with distinct characteristics, such as different sizes, atmospheres, and surface conditions. Mars is known as the "Red Planet" due to its reddish appearance, while Earth is the only planet known to support life.
Venus is the planet most similar to Earth in size, mass, volume, and density. It is often referred to as Earth's "sister planet" due to these similarities despite having a very different atmosphere and surface conditions.
The planet Earth is approximately spherical in shape. In terms of maps, this means that a globe most accurately portrays the shape of the Earth's surface.
Venus is often referred to as Earth's "sister planet" due to similarities in size and composition. Both planets are rocky, terrestrial worlds with similar gravity and are located relatively close to each other in the solar system.
The Planet Venus, since it is of a similar size and composition. It is also the planet which comes closest to earth.
It has few similarities. It is approximately spherical (like the earth), it spins in the same direction as the earth. It does have a similar axial tilt as the earth (26.73 degrees) and has a similar equatorial surface gravity at 1.065g (where earth has 1g).
As of now, no planet exactly like Earth has been found in the universe. However, scientists believe there may be other Earth-like planets out there, and many exoplanets have been discovered that share similarities with Earth in terms of size, temperature, and potential for liquid water.
As of current scientific knowledge, there is no planet that is perfectly identical to Earth in terms of all its features, such as size, atmosphere composition, and climate. However, there are planets outside our solar system called exoplanets that may have some similarities to Earth in terms of size and distance from their star, making them potentially habitable.
Earth.
Within our own solar system, Earth and Mars most closely resemble each other, but with all other planets, the differences far outweigh the similarities.