Not in our solar system, outside our solar system there may well be a planet that is habitable to human life, however if we found one we would not be able to get to it with our current space travel technology they would simply be too far away.
it is a drawf planet. the people living in that planet is made up of gold. after 25,000 years ther may come to our earth
ther is no air
Size can mean different things.Mars is just over half the diameter of Earth, and has only 11% as much mass.These are the most common "size" ratios (mars/earth):Mass: 0.107 (10.7%)Mars has 11% of the mass of Earth.Volume: 0.151 (15.1%)Mars has 15% of the volume of Earth.Mean Radius: 0.532 (53.2%)Mars has a radius about half the radius of Earth.The equatorial diameter of Mars is 6792 km (4220 miles).The equatorial diameter of Earth is 12756 km (7926 miles).
There are 8 planets.
If you think about it across the whole entire universe out of the Milky Way and beyond ther must be at least 1 other inhabitable planet. They might not be like us they might have 4 legs and 7 arms!?! Who knows? In 2016 a special telescope will be in use and is x10 more accurate so we might find another planet one day!
Yes.
not that we know of. but the 8 planets we have, all of them dont except earth has life.
It means totally nothing - exept that ther is number 319 around
it never was "descovered" jesus crist made it in 7 day's thats also why ther is 7 day's in a week.
ther would be no ran and that means nothing would live on earth
it is a drawf planet. the people living in that planet is made up of gold. after 25,000 years ther may come to our earth
in my but
ther round
As far as we know - no.
He is the hottest person in the world!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Approxamatly 2 llama'sBut it depends where on earth you are!In sweeden ther are 20000 but in the UK there is only 7, that may contredict my previos answer but oh well! LLAMAS RULE!
No, living things do not necessarily have to live on the surface of a planet. Scientists could look for evidence of life in subsurface oceans on moons like Europa or Enceladus, in underground caves or habitats, or in extreme environments like deep-sea hydrothermal vents or high-altitude clouds. The search for life beyond Earth is not limited to surface conditions.