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MARS

The fourth planet from the Sun — a frozen desert of rust-red dust, towering volcanoes, and canyons that dwarf anything on Earth. The most explored world beyond our own, and the next great step for humankind. Scroll to decode the data.
MARS · RA 14ʰ39ᵐ · DEC −60°50′ · Ø 6,779 KM
PLANET PROFILE · THE RED PLANET

THE FACTS

Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun — a cold, dusty desert world named after the Roman god of war. Its rust-red surface, towering volcanoes, and frozen poles have made it the most explored planet beyond Earth, and the leading candidate for the next giant leap of human exploration.

DIAMETER6,779 km0.53 × Earth
MASS6.42×10²³ kg0.107 × Earth
GRAVITY3.72 m/s²0.38 g
DAY (SOL)24h 37m+39 min vs Earth
YEAR687 days1.88 Earth years
AVG TEMP−63 °C−153 to +20 °C
DISTANCE ☉227.9M km1.52 AU
MOONS2Phobos · Deimos

ATMOSPHERE & CLIMATE

Mars has a thin atmosphere — about 1% the density of Earth's — made up of roughly 95% carbon dioxide, 2.8% nitrogen and 2% argon. Despite the thin air, weather is real: morning frost, wispy clouds, and planet-wide dust storms that can rage for weeks and blanket the entire globe. Temperatures swing from a balmy +20 °C at the equator to a brutal −153 °C at the poles.

EXTREME TERRAIN

Mars is home to record-breaking landscapes. Olympus Mons is the tallest volcano in the solar system at 21.9 km — nearly three times the height of Everest. Valles Marineris is a canyon system over 4,000 km long, deep enough to swallow the Grand Canyon ten times over. The red color? Iron oxide — literally rust — coating the surface.

THE TWO MOONS

Phobos (27 km wide) orbits so close it laps Mars three times a day and is spiraling inward — in ~50 million years it will crash or shatter into a ring. Deimos (12 km) is tiny, distant, and so faint it would look like a bright star from the surface. Both are likely captured asteroids.

EXPLORATION LOG

  • 1965 Mariner 4 — first close-up photos
  • 1976 Viking 1 & 2 — first successful landers
  • 1997 Sojourner — first Mars rover
  • 2004 Spirit & Opportunity — water evidence
  • 2012 Curiosity — ancient habitability
  • 2021 Perseverance + Ingenuity — first powered flight on another world

COULD WE LIVE THERE?

Mars is the most Earth-like world we can reach: a 24.6-hour day, polar ice caps, seasons, and frozen water just below the surface. The hurdles are real — no breathable air, deadly radiation, and −60 °C average cold — but it remains humanity's most realistic target for becoming a multi-planet species. The journey beyond Earth starts here.

“The fourth rock from the Sun is no longer a destination. It's a direction.”

— CEO GALILEO