No, which is partly why humans have not yet colonized other planets or moons.
no, because some planets are too close to the sun it would obviously evaporte. Or there isn't enough oxygen. No way! It's quite common knowledge that there is no water on Mars. Although there was millions of years ago. But that was then and this is now.
Tsunamis are not known to occur on other planets in our solar system. The conditions required for a tsunami to form, such as the presence of large bodies of liquid water and tectonic activity, are not commonly found elsewhere in our solar system.
In the inner solar system, the planets are rocky and it is possible to have water as a vapor or a liquid on the surface. In the outer solar system the planets are gas giants and water can only exist as ice.
the amount of planets in this life-system has not yet been found but many scientist are still trying to find out do to mars water roots
Water can be found in all three states throughout the solar system. It exists as solid ice on planets like Mars and some moons of the outer planets, as liquid water on Earth and potentially beneath the surface of some moons like Europa, and as water vapor in the atmospheres of various planets and moons.
Although there are speculations of ice caps on several moons and planets outside of the solar system, the only confirmed planets within our solar system to possess them are Earth and Mars.
Earth and mars. Mars' water can only be a gas and a solid.
Sure There are planets in our solar system that have 100% liquid surfaces, why not water.
the sun the planets livingthings nonlivingthings water satellites
It's the only planet that has water.
No planet in our solar system has an atmosphere made largely of water vapor. There may be such planets orbiting other stars, but none have been conclusively found.
Yes, other planets in our solar system have water. For example, Mars has ice caps made of frozen water, and Europa, one of Jupiter's moons, is thought to have a subsurface ocean beneath its icy crust. Additionally, scientists have found evidence of water vapor in the atmospheres of some exoplanets outside our solar system.
comet eclipse{solar and lunar} oxygen gas water revolvement of planets