There is plenty of water on Mars but only a little on the Moon (maybe in the permanently dark craters).
Mars acually doesn't show at night. it is the moon and in a certin position it apears to be red.
Mars' atmosphere contains trace amounts of water vapor, and it has polar ice caps that contain frozen H2O.
For one, we know there are polar ice caps on mars that consist of ice. Second, there are gorges that show where water once flowed.
The photographs from the robots.
Earth, of course, and possibly Mars. Recent photos of Mars show dewdrops of a liquid which certainly appears to be water condensing on the landing struts of the Polar Observer.
It will never look as big as the Moon. This is the "Mars Hoax", which dates back to 2003.
Mars acually doesn't show at night. it is the moon and in a certin position it apears to be red.
NASA photographs of Mars are the best evidence that water has been flowing on Mars recently. During warmer periods in Mars' atmosphere, the photographs show streaks that look like streams. Scientists agree that this is evidence of water on Mars.
Mars' atmosphere contains trace amounts of water vapor, and it has polar ice caps that contain frozen H2O.
For one, we know there are polar ice caps on mars that consist of ice. Second, there are gorges that show where water once flowed.
The Mars Rover is important because they wanted to see if there's life on Mars. Also they wanted examples of the rocks and sand to see if people can live in Mars. It was put up there to show people what the surface of Mars looks like, and to find mineral deposits that show if there is or has been any water on Mars.
The Rover mission confirmed that Mars once had liquid water on its surface.
Analysis of the rocks on Mars show that its surface once held liquid water. Mars is too cold for water to remain liquid now, so it must have been warmer in the past.
there is evidence to show that there may, but we are still uncertain at the present time.
The photographs from the robots.
Unfortunately, probably not. Mars probably does not have enough liquid water to enable fish to live. We do know now that Mars does have water; recent photographs of the Mars Phoenix lander has shown droplets of dew on the landing struts of the spacecraft. On Europa, one of the moons of Saturn, scientists are intrigued by photos that seem to show ridges of ice on the surface of the moon. Perhaps the ice cracks, and liquid water is splashing up and freezing in the cold above the surface? We don't know, but NASA has just proposed a mission to Europa to study it.
Earth, of course, and possibly Mars. Recent photos of Mars show dewdrops of a liquid which certainly appears to be water condensing on the landing struts of the Polar Observer.