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There is liquid on Mars, frozen liquid that is. On the poles of Mars are two ice caps, and guess what ice is made of? That's right water, which is liquid. I don't know who told you there couldn't be liquid on Mars but they are wrong.
This depends on what you mean by Ice and Cap. If you want an answer that covers ONLY H2O (water) then only the earth fits that definition. Otherwise ALL non Jovian (Gas Giant) planets in orbits past Earth from the Sun are cold enough to have frozen gas and liquid on their surfaces, even at the poles. And all of them do. Some like Neptune ( and some moons) may be completely covered.
yes mars does have ice on its poles it also has water
Permafrost is the frozen liquid or gases on Mars, that never melt. While Mars' polar ice caps do shrink and grow, there are portions of it that never melt. This is the permafrost. It is frost that never melts (ie permanent frost).
Ice caps are made out of Carbon Dioxide on Mars.
The white patches at the poles of Mars are the planet's permanent polar ice caps. Like Earth, Mars has ice at its poles.
The mars axis poles have ice caps, which is frozen water on mars.
Earth & Mars
Mars
Earth and Mars
Earth, Mars,
Yes, Mars's ice caps are permanent.
North and South poles.
According to what we know Mars has no grass on its surface but there are ice caps at the north and south poles.
Rocks covered with Iron Oxide or rust and this is the reason why it is called a red planet.Mars have also ice caps on North and South poles.
the surface on jupiter is that it has no surface at all
There is liquid on Mars, frozen liquid that is. On the poles of Mars are two ice caps, and guess what ice is made of? That's right water, which is liquid. I don't know who told you there couldn't be liquid on Mars but they are wrong.