The boiling point of water is 100 degrees celsius at 1 bar of air pressure, and the boiling point decreases as one gets higher (and the pressure is lower). On mars the air pressure is 7-9% that of the Earth's, meaning that if you melt ice it would immediately turn to water vapor.
yes No it has a 100-kilometer-thick crust of ice
no Not on the surface; some speculate that there may be frozen water beneath the surface.
The answer to the blank in the phrase "liquid water on Earth's surface _____ water vapor rises into the atmosphere" is "evaporates." When liquid water evaporates, it transforms into water vapor, which then rises into the atmosphere. This process is a key component of the water cycle, contributing to weather patterns and climate regulation.
europa
Earth is the only planet in our solar system with an abundance of liquid water on its surface. Other planets may have water in the form of ice or vapor, but not in liquid form like Earth.
transpiration,i think
They believe there is liquid water underneath its frozen surface. If there is liquid water on Europa, there might also be life.
evaporation i think but i am not sure
liquid, cause its in the ocean rivers lakes etc
It is too cold for liquid water to exist on the surface
Gas (water vapor in the air) to liquid (on the surface).
yes No it has a 100-kilometer-thick crust of ice
Evaporation occurs at the surface of a liquid because it involves the conversion of liquid water molecules at the surface into water vapor molecules. This process requires energy to break the intermolecular bonds at the surface of the liquid, which is why it is considered a surface phenomenon.
The question seems poorly worded, but Earth is the planet with liquid water on its surface.
a green liquid
Mars has no liquid surface water.
Just Earth.