yes
No
Much thicker, almost certainly at least as thick as the diameter of the earth. Its pressure is much higher as well due to the high mass of the planet and its atmosphere and the strong gravity.
Mars has a weaker greenhouse effect compared to Earth because it has a much thinner atmosphere overall. Although the martian atmosphere is mainly carbon dioxide, its low density limits its ability to trap heat effectively. Additionally, Mars lacks significant amounts of other greenhouse gases like water vapor that contribute to a stronger greenhouse effect on Earth.
Mars has an atmosphere but it is much thinner than earths. It's mainly carbon dioxide gas (95%).
the Martian atmosphere is made up of 95% Carbon Dioxide, 3% nitrogen, 1.6% argon, and 0.4% oxygen.
The atmosphere on Mars is much thinner than on Earth. So the same wind on Mars carries much less force than on Earth.
Earths atmosphere consists of 78.09% Nitrogen, 28.95% Oxygen and 1% trace elements, mainly Argon. The martian atmosphere consists of 96% Carbon Dioxide, 1.9% Nitrogen, 1.9% Argon, with oxygen present only as a trace element. Where you to inhale the martian atmosphere you would suffocate. The atmosphere on mars is also very thin, only 0.06% that of the Earth's so your blood would boil etc. The temperature is also incredibly cold ranging from - 87°C, rarely going above freezing, so humans could not function there with no form of space suit.
Jupiter's atmosphere is much thicker than Earth's. It is composed mainly of hydrogen and helium and extends thousands of kilometers above the planet's surface, making it one of the largest atmospheres in our solar system.
Nitrogen accounts for 78% of the atmosphere.
The earths atmosphere is made up of 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen
Yes, but it is much thinner than Earth's atmosphere, and has considerably more carbon dioxide.
Venus' atmosphere is much thicker than Earth's