Due to its retrograde spin, where does the Sun appear to rise on the surface of Venus?

Answer

The Sun appears to rise in the west and set in the east.

The direction in which celestial bodies appear to move across the sky is dictated by the rotation of the observer's planet. Since Venus rotates in the retrograde direction—opposite to the prograde spin common to Earth and most other planets—the apparent movement of the Sun is inverted relative to Earth's familiar cycle. On Venus, an observer on the surface would witness the Sun ascending from the western horizon, traversing the sky, and descending below the eastern horizon. This inversion is a direct visual consequence of its spin direction being opposite to that of Earth.

Due to its retrograde spin, where does the Sun appear to rise on the surface of Venus?
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