No. Mars is a "terrestrial" or "earth-like" planet. Mars is mostly rocky, although there is a very thin atmosphere of carbon dioxide.
It is terrestrial.
It's a terrestrial planet
No, Mars is only about half the size of Earth and it is a solid, rocky planet.
Jupiter is the first of the gaseous (Jovian) planets and Mars is the last terrestrial one.
The non-gaseous planets, called Rocky planets are Mercury, Venues, Earth and Mars.
Mars is a solid planet with a rocky surface. It has a thin atmosphere composed mainly of carbon dioxide.
Mars is a terrestrial planet, meaning it has a solid, rocky surface. Unlike gaseous planets like Jupiter and Saturn, Mars features mountains, valleys, and polar ice caps. Its atmosphere is thin and primarily composed of carbon dioxide, but it lacks the thick gaseous envelopes characteristic of gas giants.
Mars is a terrestrial planet. The word 'terrestrial' means 'Earth-like'. It's applied to planets that are made up mainly of silicate rocks. Such a geological make up is found in the dwarf planet Ceres and among the 'inner planets' of Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.
It is terrestrial. The terrestrial plants are: Mercury Venus Earth Mars Pluto (if you still pretend it's planet. I do!) The gaseous are: Saturn Jupiter Neptune Uranus
Mars is a rocky planet.....the 4 inner planets are rocky and the 4 outer planets are gas (gas giants)
Venus is not a gaseous planet. It is a rocky planet covered by cloud.
it is a gaseous.