mars is a very cold you would think that it is very hot but it`s not.
Its is know freezing because the atmosphere that keeped it warm disapeered.
you would be freezing and have no food
They prabably will be freezing to death because its cold.
yes if it was everlasting but no because its freezing
The thin atmosphere on Mars traps less heat, which causes temperatures to drop significantly, leading to water freezing into ice. Even though Mars is closer to the sun, its distance alone does not determine temperature; factors like atmosphere and insolation play a crucial role in the freezing of water on Mars.
Humans cannot permanently live Mars with current technology because the atmosphere of Mars is very thin, and it is made up of mostly carbon dioxide. Also, Mars can have nice 70-degree days, but many times it is below freezing.
Salty water has a lower freezing point than pure water. So, very salty water may have a chance of being liquid on Mars. However there seems to be no liquid water on Mars.
Parts of Mars do experience freezing temperatures, especially at night when temperatures can drop significantly. However, Mars is not entirely frozen. There are regions on Mars where the temperatures can be warm enough to allow water in liquid form to exist temporarily.
The surface temperature is VERY cold. It rarely gets up to the freezing point of water.
It's properties are relatively the same, but because of the change in air pressure, the freezing point for water on mars is much colder than it is on earth. As an add-on to the above answer: The ice on Mars is made up almost entirely of CO2.
Neptune is a freezing gas giant with no solid surface and very little sunlight. Mars, Mercury and Venus are hot or warm planets with rocky surfaces and plenty of sunlight.
Venus and Mars are the least alike in our solar system. Venus is a hot, inhospitable planet with a thick atmosphere and surface temperatures hot enough to melt lead, while Mars is a cold, arid planet with a thin atmosphere and surface temperatures that can reach below freezing.