Noooope. Include Mercury and Netpune. And post your numbers and show your math using NASA numbers. You can say whatever you want, show us the proof.
BTW, Venus is 0.723 AU from the sun, so the distance between its orbit and Earth's is, on average (because ellipses, how do they work?) 0.277 AU. Earth to Mars delta is about 0.524 AU, not a doubling of 0.277 and definitely not a doubling of 0.3. The asteroid belt is 2.2 - 3.2 AU away, definitely not a doubling there either.
So, you're wrong. Still. You won't show your work or source data. What's your excuse this time? That differences in millions of miles is quibbling?
oh, and the sun rotates at different rates depending on location. The poles take about 38days, the equator takes 24 to 25, so no, you're wrong on that too.