Like all other planets and other objects in the solar system, including you, Venus is kept in orbit by the Sun's gravity, which is exacty balanced by its acceleration towards the Sun, which appears as a continuous inward curve towards the Sun.
It takes Venus about 224.7 "Earth days" to complete one orbit.
Mercury and Venus orbit the sun faster than Earth. Mercury has the shortest orbit at around 88 Earth days, while Venus takes about 225 Earth days to complete one orbit.
Venus has the most nearly circular orbit around the sun. Its eccentricity, which measures how much an orbit deviates from a perfect circle, is the lowest among all the planets in our solar system.
That would be the planet known as earth.it is our planet earth
VenusIt completes one orbit around the sun in about 224.7 Earth days.
The Sun's gravity pulls on: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Gravity is a force that pulls the planets or a force to push. Gravity is on the Earth, gravity is floated in space. So the Sun's gravity keeps the planets to orbit the Sun.
In 2005 a satellite went into orbit around Venus.
Angular momentum is what keeps the planet Venus up, in the sense of not falling into the sun. To be precise, it is the balance between the gravitational attraction of the sun, and the angular momentum of the planet, which keeps Venus in its orbit.
Never. Or, if it ever does, once. Venus is in a stable orbit around the Sun, and it would take a titanic force to cause Venus to fall into the Sun.
No. Venus is a planet (in orbit around the Sun) with no natural satelites.
The orbit of Venus is:108,200,000 KM from the Sun.
There are no known moons in orbit around Venus.
venus orbit is short because it is closer to the sun. thank you for all of your support
an oval
None.
Yes. Venus orbits the sun.
It takes Venus about 224.7 Earth days to orbit the Sun.