On Mars, there is a thick layer of red clouds, filled with nitric acid. you probably couldnt see the sun through the clouds. but if there was a time with no clouds, it would look almost identical to the way we see it on Earth. Slightly smaller, since it Mars is farther away from the sun than Earth, but it would still be yellow and it would hurt you eyes to look at it.
It would look similar to the way it does from Earth, only smaller as Mars is further away.
Mars is farther away from the sun.
it looks just as big if not smaller from earths view !
The Sun is always shining on Mars just like earth.
About an estimate of 2600600 mars' would fit into the Sun.
Mars is farther away from it.
The Martian sunset is the scnenery in which the Sun sets on Mars. Captured in a few pictures and videos by a few Mars rovers, we find out that it would be a beautiful scenery to an observer on the surface of Mars. The Martian atmosphere will make the sky look butterscotch and the setting Sun would begin to look blue. Because of Mars's relatively far distance from the Sun compared to the Earth, the Sun would also look 40% smaller and 25% dimmer than we see on the Earth. As the Sun begins to set in the western sky, the sky will darken, until finally the sky will turn completely dark with no source of light except for Mars's moons Phobos and Deimos, the planets outside Mars's orbit (since Mercury, Venus, and the Earth would be morning/evening "stars"), and stars.
Mars is visible from Earth in the night sky because of its orbit around the Sun. When Earth and Mars align in their orbits, Mars appears brighter and closer to us, making it visible with the naked eye. This usually occurs when Mars is at opposition, meaning it is directly opposite the Sun in the sky.
Pretty much the same as it does from Earth, except about 30% smaller and dimmer.
The Sun appears smaller from Mars than from Earth because Mars is farther away from the Sun than Earth is. This distance causes the Sun to appear smaller in the Martian sky. Additionally, Mars has a thinner atmosphere than Earth, which may affect the perception of the Sun's size.
From the distance of Pluto, the Sun would look like a very bright star.
No, it does not. The earth has a moon, and Mars does not. It is earth's moon, earth and the sun that are involved in eclipses. All of them. Without a moon, Mars cannot experience an eclipse.