Uh... this one?
It's also thought that Uranus and Neptune have a thick water/ammonia ocean, but technically this lies below their nominal surfaces (which is arbitrarily set at the point in the atmosphere where the pressure is equal to normal atmospheric pressure on Earth).
The moon is not covered with water - it is a dry and airless celestial body with no liquid water on its surface. There may be some water ice in shadowed craters, but it is minimal compared to the total surface area of the moon.
Roughly 71% of the Earth's surface is covered by water, which includes oceans, seas, lakes, rivers, and other bodies of water. This makes water the most prevalent liquid on Earth.
Physical wetness is the state of being covered or saturated with a liquid, such as water. When an object is wet, it means that its surface is coated with water molecules. This can be observed by the object's change in appearance and texture when in contact with a liquid.
Surface Tension
Well, in my solar system liquid isn't really that rare. The second planet in my solar system has an almost entirely liquid crust, and a liquid mantle. The third planet orbiting the star in my solar system has a surface over 75% covered in liquid, and has a liquid mantle. The sixth and seventh planets in my solar system both have large hydrogen oceans. Several of the moons orbiting the sixth and seventh planets in my solar system also have liquids. I don't see why liquid could be called rare in my solar system. What about yours?
Mars is a planet that is too cold for liquid water to exist on its surface. Almost the entire surface of Mars is covered in ice.
The moon is not covered with water - it is a dry and airless celestial body with no liquid water on its surface. There may be some water ice in shadowed craters, but it is minimal compared to the total surface area of the moon.
Uranus is made up almost entirely of atmosphere. It is a gas planet. It does not even have a solid surface. The core thought to be made of an ocean of liquid water and ammonia that is under an extreme amount of pressure from the gases above.
Conditions on Mercury are far too harsh for the kinds of life we are familiar with. It is far too hot in the day, too cold at night, has no liquid surface water, and almost entirely lacks an atmosphere.
Roughly 70% of the earths surface is covered by water.
The surface of Earth is mostly covered in liquid water, with oceans making up about 71% of the planet's surface. This vast body of water plays a crucial role in regulating climate, supporting marine ecosystems, and sustaining life. Other sources of liquid water include rivers, lakes, and wetlands, but the oceans are the predominant feature.
70% of the Earth's surface is covered in salt water. Liquid fresh water covers less than 1% of the Earth
An explosion. Sometimes, depending on the surface of the planet, it leaves a crater. (75% of Earth is covered with water, and considerable areas of Saturn's moon Titan appear to be covered with some sort of liquid.)
Saturn has no solid surface as Earth does, and water cannot exist in liquid form in the dense lower atmosphere (mostly hydrogen), because it is too hot. But the rings of Saturn are almost entirely composed of water ice.
Probably not. Saturn is a gas giant planet, which means a very thick atmosphere above a surface which is entirely liquid. There may or may not be a solid core, but if there is it is deep below the surface.
Roughly 71% of the Earth's surface is covered by water, which includes oceans, seas, lakes, rivers, and other bodies of water. This makes water the most prevalent liquid on Earth.
A lake which remains in a liquid form although it is covered with ice is called an ice covered lake.