You will not pass any planets on the way from Venus to Earth because both planets are right next to each other, except if you count Venus and Earth as passing from one to the other.
Mercury Mars and Venus. Yes and these along with Earth are called the terrestrial planets.
If your starting point was the sun, you would pass Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and then Saturn.
• an atmosphere (though with different chemicals in them) • CO2 • a surface (they're terrestrial planets) • mass (though their masses are different) • volcanoes • greenhouse effect • craters
Venus and Uranus?
You don't pass any. There' nothing in space between Earth and moon except maybe a few meteoroids. The planet that is able to come closest to Earth is Venus. When Venus is as close to Earth as it can ever get, it's more than 100 times farther away than the moon ever is.
Mercury Mars and Venus. Yes and these along with Earth are called the terrestrial planets.
You would only pass Venus, since the solar system begins with the sun, and ends with Pluto. The full sequence is the sun, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto.
mercury, venus, earth, mars, jupitor, saturn, uranis, neptune
Terrestrial planet is another way of saying rocky planet. The inner rocky planets are; Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.
If your starting point was the sun, you would pass Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and then Saturn.
If you were starting from Earth - Mars and Jupiter.
• an atmosphere (though with different chemicals in them) • CO2 • a surface (they're terrestrial planets) • mass (though their masses are different) • volcanoes • greenhouse effect • craters
counterclockwise. all planets in the splor system spin this way apart from venus, which turns clockwise.
That's a little tricky as the way Venus rotates is different than the rest of the planets. But if you count when the sun rises on a given section of Earth and Venus, then Earth will have 365 days compared to about 2 for Venus in about the same time.
Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune *** Pluto is no longer a planet. It did not meet the standards of a planet. Questions? Email me at iAnswerU@hotmail.com study them learn them
The four inner, rocky planets are also known as the terrestrial planets, since they have a clearly defined terrain (unlike the four outer gas giant planets). The terms are derived from Latin words for Earth (Terra and Tellus), so these planets are, in a certain way, "Earth-like".
Venus and Uranus?