At the poles, and (believed to be) under the cryosphere.
is water on the moon...is food on the moon
Because just Because
No, it cant mars is too cold so you can only be in the form of ice
Many speculated about the presence of liquid water and rusted iron on the planet's surface.
There is plenty of water on Mars but only a little on the Moon (maybe in the permanently dark craters).
Water exists in its solid state in the ice caps. It is believed that liquid water exists beneath the surface. Formation of carbonates -Including globules
The majority of the water on the planet Mars is frozen deep beneath the surface. A small amount of water exists in the atmosphere in the form of vapor.
there are river beds which must have Bean carved by water
The intention of most of the missions to Mars was to learn more about the mineral composition of the surface. Namely, if water exists or did exists, and whether lifeforms were ever present.
Scientist believe that the planet Mars used to have flowing liquid water. Now, the water on Mars exists almost exclusively as ice.
Yes, only one planet Mars exists.
Water is abundant in space, the problem is rather that was the water exist in significant amount on any particulars planet.
Mars still exists. It is about 4.6 billion years old.
Partially, yes, and no.• water: Water exists in three forms on Earth; solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (vapor). On Mars, water exists in solid and gaseous form, but those forms aren't consumable by human beings, so they can't be drunk. So there is water on Mars, but it's unconsumable.• Sun: All the planets in our Solar System orbit around the same Sun. Mars has the same Sun as Earth does. However, Mars is about twice as far away from the Sun as Earth is, so the Sun appears 40% dimmer and 62% smaller than it appears on Earth, and a Martian sunset looks blue on Mars due to its atmosphere.• oxygen: Definitely no. There is no breathable oxygen in Mars's atmosphere.