Earth would probably be a double-planet similar to the Dwarf Planet Pluto and its moon Charon. Orbiting a barycenter outside the center of the planet itself. This would be interesting because this is an unusual getup for a planet.
Venus was created by the big bang that happen 14.5 billion years ago
The Sun would appear about 1/3 smaller from Venus compared to how it appears from Earth. This is because Venus is closer to the Sun than Earth, so its diameter is larger in the sky when viewed from Venus.
To someone living on the moon, the Earth would appear much larger than it does to those on Earth. It would look about 3.7 times bigger in the sky as seen from the moon.
If a cell were as big as a basketball, organelles would have to increase in size to be proportionate to the actual cell. -Josh
about 749336 km, which is about 94.9% farther than the moon
venus has no moon
Venus was created by the big bang that happen 14.5 billion years ago
Jupiter is so big that the Earth would orbit Jupiter.
Then the Earth would have two moons, Ceres isn't very big though (much smaller than our current moon). Maybe a small difference in the tidal cycle but that's about it. How big of a difference would depend on how close it was orbiting.
about 26mm
Venus has no moons.
The Sun would appear about 1/3 smaller from Venus compared to how it appears from Earth. This is because Venus is closer to the Sun than Earth, so its diameter is larger in the sky when viewed from Venus.
venus is medium size
two big butts
Right from moon? It appears as if a moon but big in size.
The moon model would be about 1/4th the size of the modeled earth.
It would require an incomprehensible number of Big Macs to fill up the moon. The moon's volume is estimated to be about 2.2 billion cubic kilometers, and a Big Mac is about 0.445 cubic decimeters. This means you would need trillions upon trillions of Big Macs to come close to filling up the moon.