No fixed year has been given for when the first manned space mission to Mars might take place- NASA has speculated in abstract terms that the first mission might be sent there some time in the 2030's, although this depends entirely upon how research and development progresses upon the vehicles needed to get to Mars, funding budgets, and what is or is not physically possible. Also, manned space travel is being increasingly sidelined nowadays as robotic probes become more advanced and sophisticated- it's felt in many scientific circles that we just don't NEED to go places ourselves when probes and satellites can do it for us. People probably will land on Mars one day, but it may not be until long after NASA has suggested it might.
When people can make their rocket as fast as light, then they can go to the Mars.
Maybe one year...
In a special space ship.
The length of the Martian Year is 1.88 times the length of Earth's year.
0 because its too far for travel, for our tecnology
Mars can be seen from the Earth without a telescope, people have known about its existence since the stone age.
Saturn is further from the sun than is Mars, so it has to travel further to go around the Sun once. As a result it takes Saturn longer to go around the Sun than it takes Mars. Since a year for any planet is the time it takes for it to go around the sun, the year for Saturn is longer than the year for Mars.
687 days is a year for mars
planet mars
The average number of people who travel out of the U.S. varies from year to year. The most recent report I found however states that 8% of Americans will travel outside the US this year.
The time it takes to travel from Mars to Venus depends on their positions in their respective orbits. On average, it would take several months to a year using current space travel technology for a spacecraft to make the journey. However, no direct mission from Mars to Venus has been conducted so far.
Your age does not depend on your location (unless you travel somewhere at near-lightspeed). If you were to find your age in Mars years (1 Mars year = 1 orbit of Mars around the sun) instead of Earth years, you would have to divide your Earth-year age by 1.8808.