They are both celestial bodies, both makes part of the solar system, however, the Moon ( assuming you are referring to the Earth's natural satellite) makes revolution around the Earth, and Mars, which is a planet, makes revolution around the Sun.
The moon does; it causes the tides. Mars is just there ... without it Earth would be just the same.
Venus is the brightest thing in the sky, after the Sun and Moon.
It does no such thing. Mars orbits the sun. The only large object that orbits the Earth is the Moon.
Mars is bigger than the Moon, having about twice as much surface area as the Moon. Mars-6,788 km Moon-3,476 km
Mars is bigger than Earth's moon. Mars has a diameter of about 4,212 miles, while Earth's moon has a diameter of about 2,159 miles.
Mars is about twice as big as the Moon.
The moon
The moon does; it causes the tides. Mars is just there ... without it Earth would be just the same.
no, say if you weighed 1kg on earth than you would weigh 0.1 on the moon and 0.3 on mars
No, it does not. The earth has a moon, and Mars does not. It is earth's moon, earth and the sun that are involved in eclipses. All of them. Without a moon, Mars cannot experience an eclipse.
Mars is about 80 million km away from the moon, the same (strangely enough) as the distance from Earth to Mars. So, not really. Although I guess it depends on your scale.
Mars is a planet the Moon is not. Mars orbits the Sun-the Moon does not.
Venus is the brightest thing in the sky, after the Sun and Moon.
It does no such thing. Mars orbits the sun. The only large object that orbits the Earth is the Moon.
The mass of an object remains constant regardless of its location in the universe. So, an elephant's mass would be the same on the Moon or Mars as it is on Earth. However, an object's weight, which is the effect of gravity on its mass, would differ on the Moon and Mars due to variations in their gravitational pull.
name the moon of mars
yes it is. :)