This is a very good question but from research that I have done in previous years would say the answer would be no because mars does not have some characteristics that earth does have. Mars does not have trees and and ocean. They have no food supply except rock. But no, I am afraid we would not be living on mars, sorry!
There are some reports of scientists finding ice on Mars, so it is possible that, if Mars were where earth is, Mars would have life. It is roughly the same size, which would create a similar climate. One problem, however, is its rotation. Because of the slow speed at which Mars rotates, one side would be perpetually cold, and one hot, so life would have to survive only along the rim between the areas.
If the earth were closer to the sun, it would likely be too hot for humans to live in, but there are some bacteria that live comfortably in hot springs, so an alternate form of life may arise.
If the situation in your question were to occur, 'we' as a human race may not live on mars, but likely some other species would.
Mars's gravitational pull is 38% that of Earth's, meaning you would weigh 38 pounds on that planet.
The gravity of Earth is 2.6 times that of Mars.
The surface gravity on mars is about 38% of earth. So If you weigh 100 lbs on earth you would only weigh 38lbs on mars. basically you would be light as F***
Mars has weaker gravity than Earth. The gravity on Mars is about 38% of the gravity on Earth. This means that objects on Mars weigh less than they would on Earth.
The gravity of Mars is about 38% of that on Earth. This means that if you were on Mars, you would weigh less than on Earth because gravity is weaker. However, the gravity of Mars has minimal direct effect on Earth as they are separate celestial bodies with their own gravitational fields.
Where ever you go you would still be 15
A year on Mars lasts 687 Earth days. Do a little math - 365/687=53%.53% of 10 is 5.3 years old or 5 years 109.5 days old.Sort of ...If you want to use Mars years, you should also use Mars days for your final answer.10 Earth years = 5.316886 Mars years.The Mars solar day is 1.027491 Earth solar days.Converting to Mars solar days, 0.316886 Mars years would be 217.7 Earth-days (not 109.5 days) or 211.9 Mars-daysSo in Martian years and days, someone who is exactly 10 Earth Years old would be 5 Mars-years, 212 Mars-days old.(remember the .3 in the 5.3 "years" is Mars-years, not Earth years so you have to multiply it by 687 Earth-days, not 365 Earth-days)
On Mars you would weigh pi pounds.
Mars's gravitational pull is 38% that of Earth's, meaning you would weigh 38 pounds on that planet.
Well you'd still be eight.Depends on what you use as your time reference.If you used the Earth as your reference point for a year, and you went to Mars, you would still be eight.Using Mars as your refernce point for a year, then for the same period, you would only be 4.25 years old and would not have to go to school yet.
On Mars, your weight would be less than on Earth due to the lower gravity. The gravity on Mars is about 38% of that on Earth, so if you weighed 200 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 76 pounds on Mars.
The gravity of Earth is 2.6 times that of Mars.
No. An object on Mars would weigh about 38% of what it does on Earth. The _mass_ would be the same, however, so you would be able to lift it easier, but pushing it and stopping it would be the same as on Earth.
The distance between Earth and Mars varies due to their positions in their orbits around the Sun. On average, Mars is about 225 million kilometers away from Earth. However, this distance can change as the two planets move along their respective orbits.
No. The gravity on Mars is much weaker than the gravity on Earth but it is still significant. You could jump higher but you couldn't float.
mars is a planet made out of rock so the iron is still there its just that earth has more power
The surface gravity on mars is about 38% of earth. So If you weigh 100 lbs on earth you would only weigh 38lbs on mars. basically you would be light as F***