no, mars along with all of the other planets in the solar system orbits the sun, only a moon or a wondering asteroid can orbit a planet.
No
It does no such thing. Mars orbits the sun. The only large object that orbits the Earth is the Moon.
The asteroid belt is located between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars.
Earth is between Venus and Mars. Well, not really; but the orbit of Earth is between the orbits of Venus and Mars. Venus, Mars and Earth never actually "line up".
Absolutely ! At their closest point on their orbits - the Earth and Mars are 60 million kilometres apart !
Neptune
Mars does not orbit the Earth. Mars orbits the Sun, as does the Earth.
Mars and the Earth both follow orbits round the Sun, and they also have moons in orbit round them.
It does no such thing. Mars orbits the sun. The only large object that orbits the Earth is the Moon.
The moon orbits the Earth and the Earth orbits the Sun. So. . .the moon kind of orbits the Sun. Hope I helped! (The Moon doesn't obrit Mars!)
Our moon is, you know, orbits the Earth, and Mar's moon orbits around Mars. Simple.
Mars orbits the sun, as does Earth and the other planets of the solar system.
No, Mars does not orbit around the Earth. The moon orbits around around the Earth. Both Earth and Mars orbit around the sun, but Mars is farther away from the sun.
The asteroid belt is located between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars.
Earth is between Venus and Mars. Well, not really; but the orbit of Earth is between the orbits of Venus and Mars. Venus, Mars and Earth never actually "line up".
Mars years are 687 earth days long because Mars orbits around the Sun slower than earth does.
Mars cannot orbit the earth. It orbits the Sun aprox. every 2 Earth years.
The moon orbits the earth at a distance of about 240 thousand miles. The earth orbits the sun at a distance of about 90 million miles. Mars orbits the sun at a distance at about 140 million miles, and these orbits are not purely circular. So the distance from earth to mars varies wildly from around 50 million miles to around 230 million miles. So the odd 1/4 of a million miles that the moon is from earth is a triviality in comparison.