Both of two planets travel in ellipses around the sun, and so the distance between them is constantly shifting. At its farthest, Venus lies 162 million miles (261 million kilometers) away, While at nearest Venus lies 25 million miles (40 million km).though it can reach as close as 24 million miles (38 million km).
Distance from Earth varies from 36 million miles (nearest planet after Venus) to over 250 million miles. Proportionately, this six-fold distance variation is the greatest of any planet.
Assuming you mean from Earth to Venus, about 38 million Kilometers, or about 23.6 million miles.
The distance between the Sun and the Earth is 1 AU (149.597 m km / 93 m miles) whereas the distance between the Sun and Venus is at an average of 0.723 AU (108. 200 m km / 67.625 m miles). So it can be called 72% of the Sun-Earth distance.
Once you travel to the Sun, you won't be going anywhere else. Oh, this is just a THOUGHT-experiment? The precise distance varies, as both the Earth and Venus are in elliptical orbits, but in general the Earth is ABOUT 93,000,000 miles from the Sun, and Venus is ABOUT 67,000,000 miles from the Sun. So, ABOUT 160,000,000 miles for the trip.
Venus is the closest planet to earth. It's only 26 million miles away from earth. In perspective to the sun, which is 93 million miles away from earth. The distance to Venus varies because planets move relative to each other as they orbit the Sun. 26 million miles is, roughly, the nearest Venus gets to Earth. The planet Venus is about 42 million kilometers (26 million miles) from Earth at its closest point and about 258 million kilometers (160 million miles) away at its most distant point.
Distance from Earth varies from 36 million miles (nearest planet after Venus) to over 250 million miles. Proportionately, this six-fold distance variation is the greatest of any planet.
About 162 million miles
Assuming you mean from Earth to Venus, about 38 million Kilometers, or about 23.6 million miles.
No. It would be very bad if they did, as it would likely lead to Earth and Venus colliding. Earth averages about 93 million miles from the sun while Venus averages about 67 million miles.
Venus can come within about 38.1 million kilometers (million miles) of Earth, but this mimimum distance very seldom occurs. The planet is at its closest to Earth about once every 584 Earth days, at a distance of from 38.1 to 44.6 million miles.
The distance between the Sun and the Earth is 1 AU (149.597 m km / 93 m miles) whereas the distance between the Sun and Venus is at an average of 0.723 AU (108. 200 m km / 67.625 m miles). So it can be called 72% of the Sun-Earth distance.
Once you travel to the Sun, you won't be going anywhere else. Oh, this is just a THOUGHT-experiment? The precise distance varies, as both the Earth and Venus are in elliptical orbits, but in general the Earth is ABOUT 93,000,000 miles from the Sun, and Venus is ABOUT 67,000,000 miles from the Sun. So, ABOUT 160,000,000 miles for the trip.
On average Venus is approximately 67.2 million miles or 108.2 million kilometers away from the Sun. In other units, it would be 0.723 AU.Mean distance of 108,209,000 km Maximum Distance 108,942,000 kmMinimum Distance 107,476,000 km
Venus is the closest planet to earth. It's only 26 million miles away from earth. In perspective to the sun, which is 93 million miles away from earth. The distance to Venus varies because planets move relative to each other as they orbit the Sun. 26 million miles is, roughly, the nearest Venus gets to Earth. The planet Venus is about 42 million kilometers (26 million miles) from Earth at its closest point and about 258 million kilometers (160 million miles) away at its most distant point.
Mercury- 57,000,000 miles from Earth Venus-23,700,000 miles from Earth Earth-0 miles from Earth Mars- 35,000,000 miles from Earth Jupiter- 500,000,000 miles from Earth Saturn-746,000,000 miles from Earth Uranus-1,687,000,000 miles from Earth Neptune-2,680,000,000 miles from Earth Pluto-94.5 million miles from Earth
The average distance from Earth to Venus is 93,205,678.8 miles. It would take 93,205.7 hours or about 10.6 years to get there at 1,000 miles per hour.
The distance from Earth to the Sun during summer solstice is about 1.6 million miles further than the average distance of 93 million miles. This is because the orbit is an elliptical shape.