Mercury is hotter than Venus and Venus is brighter than Mercury
Neptune can reach way below freezing and Mercury can reach way above burning.
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.
Venus ranked third in size when scientists and astronomers still considered Pluto as one of the planets in the Milky Way Galaxy. Nowadays, Venus ranks second in size, after Mercury, just as it is seen on a map of the planets in there specified order (Mercury, Venus, Earth Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune). If the planets were arranged in order from smallest to largest, they would be in this arrangement: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, Jupiter.
Mercury Mars and Venus. Yes and these along with Earth are called the terrestrial planets.
Since Earth's Moon was likely formed from a chance collision, the formation of moons may not have been a stable process in the inner solar system. Any moons that formed around Venus or Mercury could have been swept away by the stronger gravity of the Sun, as might smaller moons around Earth. If Mercury or Venus ever had satellites, they were lost long ago.
One way Mercury and Venus are the same in which they differ from other planets is that they are both very hot and dry in the daytime
It's Venus, not Mercury. Mercury spins slowly, but not in a retrograde rotation. Venus spins the opposite way from the other planets, except for one of the outer planets (Uranus).
Saturn is one of the gas giants and does not have a land surface in the way Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars do.
Neptune can reach way below freezing and Mercury can reach way above burning.
On both Venus and Mars, the most abundant gas in the atmosphere is carbon dioxide. On Earth nitrogen is the most abundant gas.
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.
Venus ranked third in size when scientists and astronomers still considered Pluto as one of the planets in the Milky Way Galaxy. Nowadays, Venus ranks second in size, after Mercury, just as it is seen on a map of the planets in there specified order (Mercury, Venus, Earth Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune). If the planets were arranged in order from smallest to largest, they would be in this arrangement: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, Jupiter.
Mercury Mars and Venus. Yes and these along with Earth are called the terrestrial planets.
In our solar system, the planets are arranged by distance from the Sun: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune. In the Milky Way galaxy, planets orbit stars, so their specific arrangement depends on the star they orbit.
Since Earth's Moon was likely formed from a chance collision, the formation of moons may not have been a stable process in the inner solar system. Any moons that formed around Venus or Mercury could have been swept away by the stronger gravity of the Sun, as might smaller moons around Earth. If Mercury or Venus ever had satellites, they were lost long ago.
It's Venus, not Mercury. Mercury spins slowly, but not in a retrograde rotation. Venus spins the opposite way from the other planets, except for one of the outer planets (Uranus).
Natural satellites have been observed in orbit around every known planet in the solar system EXCEPT Mercury and Venus.