About 2 times because since Mars is only "half" the size of the Earth you can fit one Mars on one side and one on another side, so I hope that solves your question.
To determine how many Plutos can fit in Mars, we need to compare their volumes. The volume of Pluto is approximately 6.39 x 10^9 cubic kilometers, while the volume of Mars is about 1.63 x 10^11 cubic kilometers. By dividing the volume of Mars by the volume of Pluto, we find that roughly 25 Plutos can fit inside Mars.
To compare that, if you can't find the planets' volume directly, take the diameter of each planet and cube it. Then divide.
1,000,000,000 is how many times it could fit into the sun.
Approximately 63 Earths could fit inside Uranus, as Uranus has a diameter about 4 times that of Earth.
Give that Jupiter's mean radius is 69,911 kilometers and Mars' radius is 3,396 km, you would be able to line up about 20 Mars across Jupiter. For comparison you could line up 11 Earths across Jupiter. In terms of volume you can fit 8,724 Mars and 1,321 Earths inside Jupiter.
None, because only half an Earth can fit inside of Mars.
Actually, Mars is smaller than Earth. Mars is only three-fourths the size of Earth, so 75% of Earth would fit in Mars.
To determine how many Plutos can fit in Mars, we need to compare their volumes. The volume of Pluto is approximately 6.39 x 10^9 cubic kilometers, while the volume of Mars is about 1.63 x 10^11 cubic kilometers. By dividing the volume of Mars by the volume of Pluto, we find that roughly 25 Plutos can fit inside Mars.
non because it is to small
The volume of Mars is 0.151 times that of the Earth The volume of the Moon is 0.02 times that of the Earth So 0.151/0.02 = 7.55 Moons fit inside Mars.
Mars is the 3rd planet and mars is the 4th planet from the sun
1300 earth can fit in it
1
4 moons could ft inside the Earth.
To compare that, if you can't find the planets' volume directly, take the diameter of each planet and cube it. Then divide.
1,000,000,000 is how many times it could fit into the sun.
45-50