It is very likely that there is liquid water below the Martian surface. Water almost certainly flowed on the surface millions of years ago so there are likely reserves in the sub-surface.
Actually, there is no living thing on Mars (yet), but water is frozen in the polar ice caps and deep underground. So, there is no food source on Mars, but water there is possible.
At the poles and underground. It is ice.
Because Mars and Europa are considered two of the most likely places to find liquid water. Mars is thought to have tiny amounts of water that become liquid in it's soil, theoretically allowing some particularly resilient forms of bacteria to survive, and there may be relatively large bodies of water deep beneath Mars's surface. Europa is thought to have a global underground ocean (similar to the way Earth has an underground global magma "ocean") with a volume greater than all the water on Earth.
There are a few signs which lead scientists to believe that Mars in fact did, and possibly still has, water in a liquid form. These clues are the river beds carved into the rock of Mars as well as the presence of Iron Oxide in the surface of Mars. On the 31st of July, 2008, NASA announced that it had found water on mars.
Some tresses of water on mars .So we can say that there is water on mars
yes. there is water underground and scientist believe mars once had streams, lakes, and an ocean
No, any water located on Mars is either frozen in the ice caps or trapped deep underground.
Actually, there is no living thing on Mars (yet), but water is frozen in the polar ice caps and deep underground. So, there is no food source on Mars, but water there is possible.
The astronomers suppose that the water is frozen underground there. Long time ago Mars was warmer and water flows out. That's why the Curiosity car found peeblestones on the surface of Mars.
At the poles and underground. It is ice.
Yes, but not LIQUID water. In many cases, it's possible to detect things that are underground by radar, and by the type of return signal, figure out what kind of thing the radar pulse hit. Scientists controlling the Mars Surveyor satellite have bounced radar beams off of the north polar regions of Mars, and the return signal indicates that at least some water ice is buried a few centimeters underground.
Nobody Knows but there could be if there was intelligent life on mars but I am guessing no.
Yes, but not as we know it... frozen liquids have been discovered, and we hope it's water that could support life.
for us we would need what we have here even the things you cant see but for aliens its completely unown what they would need as they are different if there are aliens on mars they would probably not need water as water is only found underground on mars and its rare down there
Because Mars and Europa are considered two of the most likely places to find liquid water. Mars is thought to have tiny amounts of water that become liquid in it's soil, theoretically allowing some particularly resilient forms of bacteria to survive, and there may be relatively large bodies of water deep beneath Mars's surface. Europa is thought to have a global underground ocean (similar to the way Earth has an underground global magma "ocean") with a volume greater than all the water on Earth.
Underground water is called underground water, because it is "underground" not because it is fresh or salt. You can have underground salt water reservoirs just like you can have fresh water ones.
Underground water is called underground water, because it is "underground" not because it is fresh or salt. You can have underground salt water reservoirs just like you can have fresh water ones.