Venus
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Venus
Summary
Venus is an inner planet of the Solar System[1]. Venus draws 20,074 Wikipedia views per month (inner_planet_of_the_solar_system category, ranking #3 of 3).[2]
Key Facts
- Venus's instance of is recorded as inner planet of the Solar System[3].
- Venus's instance of is recorded as inferior planet[4].
- Venus is named after Venus[5].
- The location of Venus was inner Solar System[6].
- Venus is part of inner Solar System[7].
- Venus is used for terraforming of Venus[8].
- Venus is used for colonization of Venus[9].
- Venus's Commons category is recorded as Venus (planet)[10].
- Venus's parent astronomical body is recorded as Sun[11].
- Venus's child astronomical body is recorded as Pioneer Venus Orbiter[12].
- Venus's child astronomical body is recorded as cytherocentric orbit[13].
- Venus's child astronomical body is recorded as cytherostationary orbit[14].
- Venus's child astronomical body is recorded as cytherosynchronous orbit[15].
- Venus's child astronomical body is recorded as Hyperspectral Observer for Venus Reconnaissance[16].
- Venus's child astronomical body is recorded as Venus Express[17].
- Venus's said to be the same as is recorded as Morning Star[18].
- Venus's said to be the same as is recorded as Evening Star[19].
- Venus's Unicode character is recorded as ♀[20].
- Venus comprises atmosphere of Venus[21].
- Venus's highest point is recorded as Skadi Mons[22].
- Venus's IPA transcription is recorded as ˈveːnʊs[23].
- Venus's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Venus[24].
- Venus's notation is recorded as Venus symbol[25].
- Venus's Commons gallery is recorded as Venus[26].
- Venus's described at URL is recorded as https://www.livescience.com/space/venus/why-is-venus-so-bright[27].
Body
Geography
Venus is part of inner Solar System[7].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include inner planet of the Solar System[3] and inferior planet[4].
History and Context
Venus is named after Venus[5].
Cultural Significance
Things named for Venus include LTT 9779 b[28], an exoplanet[29]; Mount Myōjō[30], a mountain[31], in Japan[32]; and Venus Glacier[33], a glacier[34].
Why It Matters
Venus draws 20,074 Wikipedia views per month (inner_planet_of_the_solar_system category, ranking #3 of 3).[2] Venus has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35] Venus is known by 30 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]
Entities named for Venus include LTT 9779 b[28], an exoplanet[29]; Mount Myōjō[30], a mountain[31], in Japan[32]; and Venus Glacier[33], a glacier[34].