no
no
No seasonal temperatures do not exist on Saturn. Saturn has a surface temperature that remains steady throughout the year at 178 degrees Celsius.
I dont know you ask me
I think that temperatuer does exist in venus because mars has ice capsand all the seasons but its cold. Venus has seasonal temperatuer but we dont notice it.
Parts of Mars do experience freezing temperatures, especially at night when temperatures can drop significantly. However, Mars is not entirely frozen. There are regions on Mars where the temperatures can be warm enough to allow water in liquid form to exist temporarily.
The axial tilt of Jupiter is relatively small: only 3.13°. As a result this planet does not experience significant seasonal changes, and very little in the way of seasonal temperature changes
can life exist on mars
Water cannot exist in liquid form on Mars and the outer planets because of their extremely low temperatures. Mars has a thin atmosphere that cannot trap enough heat for liquid water to exist on its surface. The outer planets, like Jupiter and Saturn, have such low temperatures that water freezes into solid ice or exists as vapor in their atmospheres.
Water may exist on Mars in the form of ice, located in polar ice caps and underground ice deposits. There is also evidence of seasonal liquid water flow on the surface in dark streaks known as recurring slope lineae.
Yes
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Although Mars does have some limited water vapor in its atmosphere and seasonal frost, there is no rain on Mars as we know it. The planet's thin atmosphere and cold temperatures prevent the formation of rain. Instead, any water present on Mars would likely fall as snow or ice.