Yes. Mars has quite a few craters.
It starts with the same letter. They are both cratered
Deimos is the smallest of Mars' moons. It is small, lumpy, and heavily cratered. It whirls around mars every 30 hours.
The moon with heavily cratered terrain adjacent to much younger terrain is the moon of Mars, Phobos. This moon showcases a stark contrast between the heavily cratered surface that dates back billions of years and the much younger grooved regions thought to be formed from Mars' gravitational forces and tidal stress.
Phobos is one of the moons of Mars. It is the larger of the two moons orbiting Mars and is an irregularly shaped object with a heavily cratered surface.
Mars. However you are wrong in implying that Earth's surface IS cratered, it is not andy impact craters have been modified by Earth's geological processes and are not obviously visible today.
Because they've been hit by less things.
Cratered.
No, they're the least cratered. That's why they look smooth.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars are the inner planets that have rocky surfaces. These planets are primarily composed of silicate rocks and metals, with solid surfaces that range from cratered and mountainous terrains to volcanic plains and valleys.
Mercury is the most cratered planet in the solar system.
Both the surface of the moon and Mars are rocky and heavily cratered, with large expanses of barren and dusty plains. However, Mars also has features like mountains, canyons, and volcanic regions that distinguish it from the moon's more uniform surface. Additionally, Mars has a thin atmosphere and evidence of past liquid water, while the moon does not have an atmosphere or surface water.
MARS is the rockiest planet in our olar system its a verry well known fact :)