No. The Sun would appear to be about 40% smaller from Mars, because Mars is about 40% further away from the Sun than Earth is.
No, Mars isn't twice the size of the Earth. The equatorial diameter of the Earth is 7,926 mi (12,760 km), while the equatorial diameter of Mars is 4,220 mi (6,792 km). So we can tell that the Earth is twice the size of Mars, not the other way round.
earth is 93 million miles that is with six zeros and mars is 47 million miles the difference is46000000 46 million miles difference
Earth is about 1.88 times larger than Mars.
None, because only half an Earth can fit inside of Mars.
Earth has the greater gravitational pull. Mars pulls with only about 38% of Earth's gravity.
Mars is about twice as big as the Moon.
Comparing diameters, Mars is about 53% the size of Earth. So, the volume of Mars is about 15% of Earth.
The two planets that are closest in size to Earth are it's neighbours: Venus and Mars. Of the two, Venus is nearly the same size, with a diameter of 12,104km (compared to Earth's diameter of 12,756km). Mars is smaller - almost half the size of Earth - with a diameter of 6792km.
Yes, Mars is about half the size of Earth
Mars is about 53% the size of Earth. This means that if you were to represent the size of Mars compared to Earth as a fraction, it would be 0.53/1.
Mars is smaller than Earth because it formed from a smaller disk of gas and dust during the early stages of our solar system's formation. Additionally, Mars does not have as strong of a gravitational pull as Earth, allowing it to maintain a smaller size.
Smaller, Mars is about half the size of Earth