There's no climate on Mars. To have climate..."the average course or condition of the weather at a place usually over a period of years as exhibited by temperature, wind velocity, and precipitation "...a planet must have weather..."the state of the atmosphere with respect to heat or cold, wetness or dryness, calm or storm, clearness or cloudiness"...and to have weather a planet must have an atmosphere..."the gaseous envelope of a celestial body"...Mars has no atmosphere, therefore has no weather, therefore has no climate. Now I know that Mars is cold and dry, but that's the natural state of things when it doesn't have a blanket of insulating gases to trap warmth from the Sun. Without warmth, what water may be there will always be solid. Without liquid water and the rise of warm/sink of cold airs, there can be no fluctuations that make weather, etc, etc. It's a loop, a cycle, and everything hinges on having an atmosphere.
We'll be just like Mars is now, if we don't stop polluting our atmosphere and fix what we've already damaged
2007-04-11 08:11:57
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answer #1
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answered by Moon Maiden 3
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It is basically in an ice age. There does appear to be lots of frozen water at the poles and even at the equator, but buried under a layer of dust. However there are also numerous dry rivers, so it is believed that the climate was once warm enough for rivers to flow.
2007-04-11 14:58:50
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answer #2
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answered by campbelp2002 7
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Sunny with highs in the low -50's, clear tonight lows around
-200. Very light wind 0-2 mph. Humidity about 1%.
Pollution index - moderate for dust.
Chance of precipitaton near zero.
Cooler in the polar regions.
This Mars Accu-weather update brought to you by our friends at NASA.
2007-04-11 14:52:18
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answer #3
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answered by Lorenzo Steed 7
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I love Lorenzo Steed's answer... Give him 10 points!
Actually, sometimes it can get above zero, though, like into the +20 degrees F range -- but not too often. That would be a very 'hot' day on Mars.
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2007-04-11 16:12:21
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answer #4
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answered by tlbs101 7
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the temperature is between -150 to 300 kelvin its consists (atmosphere) 95% cardon dioxid 1.6% argon 2.7% nitrogen the pressure is 1/200 atm and there is no cloud but in the winters the poles are icy and in the summer we could see some storms near the equator
2007-04-11 15:05:34
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answer #5
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answered by suerena 2
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Very cold, very dry with occasional but lengthy sand storms and 1/100 the pressure on earth.
2007-04-11 14:48:07
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answer #6
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answered by Gene 7
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Lousy cold to very cold. Windy at times and going through global warming.
2007-04-11 14:50:54
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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has sand storms often
density is 3.93 g/cm cubed
temp. is -123 to 37degrees celsius
surface gravity is 38 percent of the Earths
2007-04-11 14:53:57
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answer #8
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answered by twirlgurl4507 1
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it is cold because it is far from the sun and becuz the water on mars is frozen
2007-04-11 14:48:41
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answer #9
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answered by queen lalapalusaoflalapalusaland 2
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Balmy.
2007-04-11 15:05:45
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answer #10
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answered by raymond b 1
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