No, not all planets rotate from left to right. The direction of rotation varies among the planets in our solar system. For example, Venus rotates from right to left, opposite to the majority of the planets.
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.
Mercury and Earth are the two planets closest to Venus.
Mercury and Earth are the two planets that are next to Venus in our solar system. Mercury is the closest planet to Venus, followed by Earth.
The two closest planets to Venus are Mercury and Earth. Mercury is the closest planet to Venus, followed by Earth.
No, not all planets rotate from left to right. The direction of rotation varies among the planets in our solar system. For example, Venus rotates from right to left, opposite to the majority of the planets.
Depends on what you mean by that. For planets, Venus is the planet left to the Earth, and Mars is the planet right of the Earth.
There are no planets on venus. Venus is a planet.
On December 1st Jupiter and Venus were seen very close to the Moon. This is called a conjunction.
For Venus, the rotation is actually just cloud movement (it rotates imperceptibly, taking 243 days to spin once).For the other planets, if they are observed with a refracting telescope, the image will be inverted (upside down), so the rotation will appear right-to-left instead of left-to-right (west-to-east) for five of the seven planets viewed.
Its Equatorial radius about 3,396.2 Km which makes it 0.533 Earths.See the photo of (from left to right) Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars to scale:
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.
Yes, Venus is one of the inner planets. "inner" means being close to the Sun, Venus is the second closest planet to the Sun. The inner planets are also the "rocky" planets. The inner planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.
Mercury and Earth are the two planets closest to Venus.
Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.
The four inner, rocky planets (also known as the terrestrial planets) are; Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars
ON the left is Venus and on the right is Mars