Not at the moment. Currently it is just on the outer (cool) edge of the habitable zone [See Link]. However, give a couple of million years this will change as the Sun gets hotter.
Neither. The goldilocks zone refers to a planet which is just the right distance from the Sun to retain water on it's surface. See related link for a pictorial.
No Mars in Just outside the rim of the "Goldilocks Zone" The Goldilocks zone is refering to a planet far enough from the sun to retain water in the liquid form. mars being just outside the rim of it isn't able to retain its water in a liquid form so it all froze hence on its poles. plus the planet is consistant of C02 inside the atmosphere and would take millions of years to make it habitable from trees or vegetation. but since the atmosphere is too weak the oxygen would just "float away"
It is called the "Habitable Zone" because water can exist in fluid form. It has also been referred to as the "Goldilocks Zone" . Not to hot and not to cold, but just right.
The only planet on our solar system that resides withinthe Goldilocks zone is Earth.The planets that reside outside the Goldilocks zone are:MercuryVenusMarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptune
Goldilocks Zone or Goldilocks Planet.
By hot zone, I assume you mean out of the habitable or Goldilocks zone. Estimates vary, but in all likely hood changes will become noticeable in about a billion years, and severe in three billion years.
There is no planet called Goldilocks. You are thinking of the Goldilocks zone. [See related question]
The 'Goldilocks Zone,' or habitable zone, is the range of distance with the right temperatures for water to remain liquid. Discoveries in the Goldilocks Zone, like Earth-size planet Kepler-186f, are what scientists hope will lead us to water––and one day life.
no, goldilocks is a zone around a star where a planet with appropriate atmospheric pressure can maintain the liquid water on its surface
Because Gliese 581 g, if it exists, is located near the middle of the habitable zone (or Goldilocks zone - [See related question]) of its parent star.
Mars revolves around the same sun as Earth.
Earth