Well over a hundred million miles.
This is beyond the realm of anything we on earth are familiar with. Take the longest distance you can imagine walking and multiply it by a thousand.
As with any object, Mars does have gravity. It may not be as strong as on earth, but it is there and it attracts objects to its surface.
Just like Earth's gravity holds you to Earth, and doesn't let you float away, Mars, too, has some gravity (less than Earth), which won't simply let objects float away into space.
The name of the group of objects between Mars and Jupiter is the ASTEROID BELT.
earth is 1 planet away from mars
The 'mission to Mars' is decades and hundreds of millions of miles away. We will first have a base on the moon, which is only a quarter million miles away. (Baring a world war or catastrophic natural disaster.)
Objects weigh less on Mars than on Earth because Mars has less mass than Earth, resulting in weaker gravitational pull on objects. This weaker gravitational pull means that objects weigh less on Mars compared to Earth.
Mars' moons are Phobos and Deimos. No other known natural objects are orbiting Mars. But humans have sent three satellites into orbit around Mars. Mars Express (ESA), 2001: Mars Odyssey (NASA) and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (NASA).
The night stars are farthest from the Earth. The other three objects -- Sun, Moon, and Mars -- are all within the Earth's solar system.
Yes, Mars' gravity affects other objects just like any other planetary body. The strength of Mars' gravity is about 38% of Earth's gravity, so objects will weigh less on Mars than on Earth. This weaker gravity also influences things like the orbit of spacecraft around Mars.
The objects that are found between Mars and Jupiter are called asteroids. This area is called the asteroid belt.
They are heavier on Venus due to it's larger mass.
Ancient. Mars is one of the objects recognized as a "planet" - a wanderer in the skies.