The term "artery lies" is not standard in medical terminology. If you meant "arterial lies," it could refer to the anatomical positioning of arteries in relation to other structures in the body. Arteries are blood vessels that carry oxygenated blood away from the heart, and their location can vary depending on the specific artery being referenced. For clarity, please specify or rephrase your question.
The arcuate artery.
Radial artery
It's a branch of the posterior tibal artery. It lies in the lateral compartment of the calf
your lungs.
ARCUATE
The common femoral vein is medial to the common femoral artery. The common femoral artery lies farther from the body's midline.
Circumflex Branch
The right atrium and the left atrium. It actually lies between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery, where it prevents the backflow of blood from the artery back into the heart during diastole (the resting period of the heartbeat)
the right interventricular sulcus I think it is atrioventricular sulus
There are not valves in the pulmonary artery or the aorta. However there are valves between these and the heart. Between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery there is a valve referred to as the pulmonary semilunar valve. Between the left ventricle and the aorta there is a valve called the aortic semilunar valve.
The atrioventricular sulcus or groove is where the right coronary artery lies. It is between the right atrium and the right ventricle.
The hepatic artery in the liver enters from the bottom and is much smaller in diameter than the aorta or the portal vein that it lies above. The hepatic vein exits the liver from the top, carries blood through the top portion of the liver, and is larger in diameter than the hepatic artery.