There is no evidence the US is going to "colonize" any planet, including Mars and Venus. But there is, and has been, a longstanding interest in learning more about other planets. In fact, for more than six decades, US presidents have promoted (some more than others) space exploration; and the US space program, directed by NASA, has received funding from congress. In the late 1960s, the US finally put a man on the moon. Since then, there has been talk of missions to Mars, and perhaps other planets as well. But again, this is not about colonizing-- this is about understanding the universe better and learning more about the various planets in our solar system.
There are no known inhabitants of the planet Venus, human or otherwise. (For the US cities, see the related questions below)
It takes about 243 Earth days for Venus to rotate on its axis, so a day on Venus is longer than a year on Venus, which is about 225 Earth days. The exact time it would take to travel around Venus would vary depending on the speed and trajectory of the spacecraft.
No. No astronauts have gone further away than the moon. Venus is much further away from us than that.
No, Venus in its full phase is not visible from Earth. When Venus is in its full phase, it is positioned on the opposite side of the Sun from Earth, which means it is lost in the Sun's glare and not visible to us.
Yes, Venus is the brightest planet as viewed by us. Mainly, it is because of the way the sun's rays reflect off of Venus's bright surface. Venus is the only planet able to be seen easily with the naked eye.
I don't think its possible to colonize Venus
No. The planet we are most likely to colonize is Mars.
There is no known term for a hypothetical inhabitant of Venus. If humans were to colonize Venus in the future, they may be referred to as "Venutians" or "Venusians."
no
They emigrated to the USA
spain
nope
Venus is pronounced Veen-us
Hawaii was not a colony.
Eastern Coast (NovaNet)
234 Days
the east country of india in your mama