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In Full Effect was created in 1988.
We call it the greenhouse effect, which is natural, or the enhanced (or accelerated) greenhouse effect which is causing global warming.
No, a planet without an atmosphere cannot have a greenhouse effect because the atmosphere is necessary to trap heat and create the warming effect. Without an atmosphere, there is no mechanism to retain heat and create the greenhouse effect.
Under normal circumstances the effect is not noticeable. It is only when gravity is extreme does it make a discernible effect, which is to slow time.
EarthVenusMarsThe greenhouse effect occurs on every planet with an atmosphere (including Earth). On Venus, there is a runaway greenhouse effect causing temperatures high enough to melt lead.Mars has a greenhouse effect that is weak because of its thin atmosphere.
71%
Mercury does not orbit the earth - ever!
either a metor or astriod
The asteroid belt is located in space. JK! Between the planets Mars and Jupiter.
in about 2032
No Mars is a planet made completely made out of rock.One way to prove this is because it is on the inside of the Astriod Belt.
yes it is because it is jupiter is called an outer planet and outer planets are named because they are before the asteroid belt. My answer is YES!
on a mystrious planet in space to the left of space in the astriod belt u can only acess after u beat the fire, ice, and jungle planets
go to co-ordinates x15 y84 in the astriod belt and go to the castle thing on the meteor tthere you will fight the Mordred guy
There is no Last Glacier, the last ice age before the astriod that killed the dinos but 15000 years ago most of the Glaciers covered most of north america, then they started melting back, leaving the great lake and such.
It formed around the same time as the other planets. However - the gravity pull of Jupiter exerted so much influence - that the rocks in the asteroid belt couldn't 'gel' together to form a solid planet.
Objects that orbit the Sun like planets include dwarf planets, asteroids, comets, and even artificial satellites. These objects follow distinct paths within the solar system and are influenced by the gravitational pull of the Sun.