It is not difficult at all to find Mars. It never wanders far from the ecliptic and is always fairly bright. You might consider consulting a table of ephemera to give you its precise location if you can't find it on your own.
yes and scientists are finding more about this but there is water on one of the lands of mars which they are if humans can live there
no
What does the robot sense
You appear to be misinformed. It is more difficult to send people to mars because it is so much farther away. That is why we have not sent astronauts to mars yet, but we have sent astronauts to the moon.
It would be considered a scientific discovery.
Mars travels at somewhere around 24,000 m/s in its orbit around the sun. You can work this out by finding the distance of Mars to the Sun (the radius of orbit), finding the total distance of orbit (multiply your radius by 2*pi - assuming a circular orbit, which is ROUGHLY a good approximation), then divide by length of a Mars year. Enjoy.
No, I can't answer it and I am really frustrated that finding such charts is so difficult and finding who manufactures this unit for ACE is also difficult
the phoenix lander is currently digging into ice under the surface to see if there actually is liquid water on mars.
1200
1200kg
Mars. Or, at least, that is what the stereotype is, because scientists are finding water.
The topic of life on Mars has been one of hot debate lately with the recent Rover bot finding more "possible" signs of life on Mars. However, there is no definitive evidence that there is life on Mars.