It's not. A day on Mars (a sidereal rotation period) is 1.026 Earth days.
The SAME? No. "ABOUT" the same? Well, close; a Mars day is a little less than 25 hours.
Yes. The effects of gravety on Mars are less than on Earth. Mars has 37.6% of Earth's gravity.
Mars if farther from the sun than the Earth is, so it gets less sunlight, but there is still sunlight on Mars - during the day.
No planet really does have a day "the same length as Earth", but Mars definitely has the one that's the closest. The day length of Mars is just over half an hour longer than Earth's.
No. The gravity on Mars is about 38% that on Earth. So Mars has about 62 percent less gravity.
Mars has less gravity.
Why does Mercury and Mars have less gravity than Earth because they both have less mass than does the Earth.
Mars. Although its year is significantly longer than an Earth year (time taken to orbit the Sun), its day length is very similar. It's slightly longer at about 24 hours and 37 mins. (That is the time taken for the planet to spin once on its axis, called a "sidereal" day.)
The duration of The Day Mars Invaded Earth is 1.17 hours.
The day lengths are very similar. Earth has a 24 hour day. This is the"solar day". Earth spins once in about 4 minutes less time than the solar day and that's called the sidereal day. Mars spins once in about 24 hours 37 minutes. The solar day on Mars is about 2 minutes longer.
The gravity on Mars is about 38% of the gravity on Earth. This means that objects weigh less on Mars compared to Earth.
Pluto but if you dont count that as a planet then Mercury.