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It takes Mars 1.88 Earth years to go around the Sun. So, if you lived on Mars, your Birthdays would be 687 Earth days apart.So, take your current age and divide by 1.88 to get your Mars age.
Your age does not depend on your location (unless you travel somewhere at near-lightspeed). If you were to find your age in Mars years (1 Mars year = 1 orbit of Mars around the sun) instead of Earth years, you would have to divide your Earth-year age by 1.8808.
On Mars, a 20 year old would be the same age as on Earth since age is measured based on Earth years. However, a year on Mars is longer than a year on Earth, approximately 1.88 Earth years. So, if a person celebrated 20 years on Mars, in Earth years, they would be around 10.64 Mars years old.
A full year on Mars is about 687 earth days. That is about two earth years. This means that when you are 18 years old on the earth, you would be 9 years old on Mars. However, this doesn't mean that you'd look twice as young as you really are, you'd just have a different age but look exactly the same as you would on the Earth at your age.
Assuming you were born on Earth, you would not age on Halley's comet as it does not have the necessary conditions for human life, such as air, water, and a suitable temperature.
mars age = earth age* 365 / 687 Mars age= 12*365/687 Mars age = 6.37 Mars years
It takes Mars 1.88 Earth years to go around the Sun. So, if you lived on Mars, your Birthdays would be 687 Earth days apart.So, take your current age and divide by 1.88 to get your Mars age.
Your age does not depend on your location (unless you travel somewhere at near-lightspeed). If you were to find your age in Mars years (1 Mars year = 1 orbit of Mars around the sun) instead of Earth years, you would have to divide your Earth-year age by 1.8808.
On Mars, a 20 year old would be the same age as on Earth since age is measured based on Earth years. However, a year on Mars is longer than a year on Earth, approximately 1.88 Earth years. So, if a person celebrated 20 years on Mars, in Earth years, they would be around 10.64 Mars years old.
A full year on Mars is about 687 earth days. That is about two earth years. This means that when you are 18 years old on the earth, you would be 9 years old on Mars. However, this doesn't mean that you'd look twice as young as you really are, you'd just have a different age but look exactly the same as you would on the Earth at your age.
You would be the same age, of course. However, you probably mean how old you would be in "Mars years". There are two ways to calculate this: A Mars year is 686.98 Earth days. At nine Earth years old, you are 3287.25 Earth days old. Divide that by 686.98 and you get 4.7850738 Mars years old. A Mars year equals approximately 1.88 Earth years. So, nine divided by 1.88 equals 4.78723404. The former is a bit more accurate. You would be 4 3/4 rounded to the nearest quarter.
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)
As there are 2.135 Julian years in a Martian year, you'd be 25.62 years old in earth years.
You would still be 11 years old no matter what star or planet you are on. It is all an age. That is incorrect. Simply work out what percentage of Earth year is Mars year (even if it is something like 101%) and divide by that percentage.
Mars takes longer to rotate around the sun than Earth. Since it takes Mars almost twice as long as earth to make a rotation around the sun, you are half your age. Less rotations, less years
His age would be nominally the same as it is on Earth, after correcting for the mental and physical difficulty of living on Mars. The problem is how to describe that age when anybody asks how old he is. If you answer in terms of Earth years, you'd say he's eleven. If you answer in terms of Mars years, you'd say he's about 5.8 . What's weird is that you'd have to specify which units you're using when you talk about age, even though it makes no difference in a person's actual age and condition.
You would still be 20 years old. Ages are, by convention, calculated in earth years. A Martian year, the time it takes Mars to orbit the sun, is longer than an earth year. Roughly twice as long, so you would be about half your earth year age in Martian years.