Full. When Venus is full it is on the other side of the Sun, so Venusians would see the Earth also on the other side of the Sun and thus it would also appear "full".
You can't unless you are on Venus . It has 5 moons.
That applies mainly to the inner planets: Mercury and Venus. Mars, being further from the Sun than Earth, can at most have a "three-quarter" phase, but you can't see it as a crescent, since that would require Mars to be basically between the Sun and Earth, which isn't possible. Saturn shows no phases.
New Moon Phase
In the new Moon phase.
The phase of the moon depends on it position in relation to the earth and the sun. For instance, when the moon is in between the earth and the sun, this is the new of full moon phase.
NO. Venus is hidden behind the Sun when its phase is "full".
When Venus goes behind the Sun (as viewed from Earth), its phase is full. You can't see it, of course. When it transits the Sun (passes between the Sun and the Earth), it's in its dark phase.
Galileo's observations of the gibbous phase of Venus proved that the Sun was the center of the Solar System, with the planets revolving around it. This disproved the prevailing theory of the time that the planets orbited around the Earth.
You can't unless you are on Venus . It has 5 moons.
Venus is a solid planet.
Venus does not have months. Venus has a year that lasts about 225 earth days. The funny thing about Venus is that a day lasts much longer than a year, with a day on Venus being over 240 earth days.
Yes but Venus' momentum keeps it (almost) in the same orbit year after year. Eventually either Venus will be pulled into the Sun or the Sun will expand (nothing to do with Venus gravity or orbit, just a phase of the Sun's development) and encompass Venus (and Mercury as well as Earth) obliterating the inner planets.
The planet Venus is _NEVER_ seen in the full phase, because it never gets anywhere near the Earth. Venus is in a closer orbit to the Sun than the Earth is, so when Venus is closest to the Earth, it's pretty close to being between the Earth and the Sun. In fact, Venus passes directly between the Earth and the Sun twice per century, most recently in 2004. We call this a "transit of Venus".So we only see Venus in its crescent phases.Think about it . . . In order to see the complete illuminated side of Venus,we'd have to be looking at it through the sun.
That applies mainly to the inner planets: Mercury and Venus. Mars, being further from the Sun than Earth, can at most have a "three-quarter" phase, but you can't see it as a crescent, since that would require Mars to be basically between the Sun and Earth, which isn't possible. Saturn shows no phases.
When Venus is full, it is on the opposite side of the sun as seen from Earth. Since it is on the opposite side, it has an approximate distance of 1.7 AU. In the thin crescent phase, Venus is probably around 0.4 AU from Earth. So it would have a larger angular diameter. That is also why it appears so much brighter in crescent phase than when full -- it is much nearer.
get it while it's HOT!
poo hole