Mars has Ice caps on both the North and South poles. The H2O that is present on Mars is entirely located in these poles. They were likely frozen completely around 1.7e9 (1700000000) years after the formation of the planet. There is a large amount of evidence of dried-up riverbeds and water bodies on the planet, along with rock formations that could only be created underwater (hematite beads), which implied that, at one point, the H2O on Mars was liquid. For a period of about 1.7e9 years, it was theoretically possible for bacterial life to develop on Mars, while there was still a presence of liquid water on the planet. As of today, the ice caps on Mars contain water ice and seasonally contain CO2 ice (dry ice), which sublimates when subjected to the sun.
Pretty much all snow on the Earth is frozen water.
Mars is much colder than Earth. The closest analog, temperature-wise, is Antarctica. Most of the snow that reaches the ground and accumulates on Mars is not made of frozen water, but of frozen carbon dioxide. It's a purer version of the "dry ice" that you might use to fog up a punch bowl at a Halloween party. And when it comes to frozen CO2, you can forget the beautifully varied, six-sided, H20 crystal snowflakes that fall from our skies. Instead, the carbon dioxide solidifying in Mars' thin atmosphere likely forms cubic pellets with the corners lopped off and replaced by triangles, called cuboctahedrons.
Furthermore, the Red Planet's white stuff is probably small compared to our everyday terrestrial snowflakes. Carbon-dioxide snow is microscopic, and the second variety - the rare water-ice snow on arid Mars, is similar to the "diamond dust" in our polar regions. There might be some small amount of dry-ice type snow mixed in with Antarctic snow, but that's pretty much the only place on Earth where it would get cold enough to form any of it.
No, the water on the planet is all frozen.
It does occasionally snow, apparently.
Sciencetist dont know for sure yet... BUT they think there MIGHT be snow on Mars.
No, water does not exist in its liquid state on the surface, so the water cycle cannot take place so there will be no precipitation.
yes- i dont know about actual snow flakes, but there is snow.
Space is a vacuum; there is essentially nothing in it. You need to have clouds to get snow, and you need moisture and lifting mechanisms to get clouds, of which there are none in space.
Yes. Like the Earth, the north and south polar regions are often covered in snow or ice.
NO!
The red planet is Mars, 4th planet from the sun and 7th largest. The name of the month of March derives from the name Mars
Mars.
Mars is an inner planet, as is Mercury, Venus, and Earth.
Mars is known as the red planet. This is because the iron in the soil gives it a red color. Mars is thought to have once had lakes and oceans.
yes mars is most definitely a planet
Maybe.....on Mars but not other planets
The red planet is Mars, 4th planet from the sun and 7th largest. The name of the month of March derives from the name Mars
Mars is an inner planet.
inner planet
Mars IS a rocky planet
Mars.
Planet mars was named after the god of war mars.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars.
Yes mars is an important planet because it is a planet.
Mars is a stronger planet not a weaker planet
Mars is an inner planet, as is Mercury, Venus, and Earth.
no! there is not a river on planet 'mars'. mars is a chocolate bar Dur