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  2. Venus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus

    Venus is the second planet from the Sun, making a full orbit in about 224 days. Venus orbits the Sun at an average distance of about 0.72 AU (108 million km; 67 million mi), and completes an orbit every 224.7 days.

  3. Orbit of Venus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbit_of_Venus

    Venus was 0.7205 au from the Sun on the day of transit, decidedly less than average. [ 9 ] Moving far backwards in time, more than 200,000 years ago Venus sometimes passed by at a distance from Earth of barely less than 38 million km, and will next do that after more than 400,000 years.

  4. Astronomical unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomical_unit

    Average distance from the Sun — Venus: 0.72 — Average distance from the Sun — Earth: 1.00 — Average distance of Earth's orbit from the Sun (sunlight travels for 8 minutes and 19 seconds before reaching Earth) — Mars: 1.52 — Average distance from the Sun — Jupiter: 5.2 — Average distance from the Sun — Light-hour: 7.2 ...

  5. Solar System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_System

    Careful observations of the 1769 transit of Venus allowed astronomers to calculate the average Earth–Sun distance as 93,726,900 miles (150,838,800 km), only 0.8% greater than the modern value. [291] Uranus, having occasionally been observed since 1690 and possibly from antiquity, was recognized to be a planet orbiting beyond Saturn by 1783. [292]

  6. Did Venus ever have oceans? Scientists have an answer - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/did-venus-ever-oceans...

    Venus is the second planet from the sun, and Earth the third. ... "Venus and Earth are often called sister planets because of their similarities in mass, radius, density and distance from the sun ...

  7. Sun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun

    At its average distance, light travels from the Sun's horizon to Earth's horizon in about 8 minutes and 20 seconds, [37] ... Venus, and the Sun. [186] ...

  8. Kepler's laws of planetary motion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kepler's_laws_of_planetary...

    The force acting on a planet is directly proportional to the mass of the planet and is inversely proportional to the square of its distance from the Sun. The Sun plays an unsymmetrical part, which is unjustified. So he assumed, in Newton's law of universal gravitation: All bodies in the Solar System attract one another.

  9. List of Solar System objects most distant from the Sun

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Solar_System...

    One particularly distant body is 90377 Sedna, which was discovered in November 2003.It has an extremely eccentric orbit that takes it to an aphelion of 937 AU. [2] It takes over 10,000 years to orbit, and during the next 50 years it will slowly move closer to the Sun as it comes to perihelion at a distance of 76 AU from the Sun. [3] Sedna is the largest known sednoid, a class of objects that ...