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  2. Timekeeping on Mars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timekeeping_on_Mars

    The Mars time of noon is 12:00 which is in Earth time 12 hours and 20 minutes after midnight. For the Mars Pathfinder, Mars Exploration Rover (MER), Phoenix, and Mars Science Laboratory missions, the operations teams have worked on "Mars time", with a work schedule synchronized to the local time at the landing site on Mars, rather than the ...

  3. Mars sol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_sol

    The average duration of the day-night cycle on Mars — i.e., a Martian day — is 24 hours, 39 minutes and 35.244 seconds, [3] equivalent to 1.02749125 Earth days. [4] The sidereal rotational period of Mars—its rotation compared to the fixed stars—is 24 hours, 37 minutes and 22.66 seconds. [4]

  4. List of unusual units of measurement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unusual_units_of...

    The United States-based NASA, when conducting missions to the planet Mars, has typically used a time of day system calibrated to the mean solar day on that planet (known as a "sol"), training those involved on those missions to acclimate to that length of day, which is 88,775 SI seconds, or 2,375 seconds (about 39 minutes) longer than the mean ...

  5. Dive in! Ancient Mars had enough water for a global ocean 300 ...

    www.aol.com/news/dive-ancient-mars-had-enough...

    During the ordinary course of day to day life, we tend to think of planets as being unmoving and unchanging. There are few things more dependable than the ground beneath our feet, but that’s ...

  6. Where Did Mars's Water Go? The Picture Is Getting Clearer - AOL

    www.aol.com/where-did-marss-water-picture...

    Earth orbits the sun in a slightly uneven circle, keeping an average distance of 93 million miles. Mars’s orbit is much more elliptical—with an aphelion, or furthest remove from the sun, of ...

  7. New Mars study suggests an ocean's worth of water may be ...

    www.aol.com/news/mars-study-suggests-oceans...

    Mars may be drenched beneath its surface, with enough water hiding in the cracks of underground rocks to form a global ocean, new research suggests. The findings released Monday are based on ...

  8. Water on Mars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_on_Mars

    The blue region of low topography in the Martian northern hemisphere is hypothesized to be the site of a primordial ocean of liquid water. [183] The Mars ocean hypothesis proposes that the Vastitas Borealis basin was the site of an ocean of liquid water at least once, [23] and presents evidence that nearly a third of the surface of Mars was ...

  9. Mars May Have Far More Water Than We Thought - AOL

    www.aol.com/mars-may-far-more-water-195315919.html

    T ime was, Earth may not have been the solar system’s only garden planet. For its first billion or so years, Mars was partly covered in water, as dry ocean basins and riverbeds on its surface ...