Q. What types of temperature ranges can be found on the planet?
The average temperatures of planets in our solar system are:
- Mercury – 800°F (430°C) during the day, -290°F (-180°C) at night.
- Venus – 880°F (471°C)
- Earth – 61°F (16°C)
- Mars – minus 20°F (-28°C)
- Jupiter – minus 162°F (-108°C)
- Saturn – minus 218°F (-138°C)
- Uranus – minus 320°F (-195°C)
- Neptune – minus 331°F (-201°C)
Q. What is the warmest temperature on Mars?
During winter, temperatures near the poles can get down to -195 degrees F (-125 C). A summer day on Mars may get up to 70 degrees F (20 C) near the equator – with the highest temperature shown by NASA at a balmy 86 degrees F (30 C).
Q. Can you survive the temperature on Mars?
Near the poles, the temperature can fall below -125°C. The human body, meanwhile, is adapted to live in environments with temperatures between 4°C and 35°C.
Q. Are there warm parts of Mars?
In general, the hottest section of Mars, its equator, does not get warmer than about 21 degrees Celsius (70 degrees Fahrenheit) at noon during the summer.
Q. Can plants grow on Mercury planet?
Mercury doesn’t have an atmosphere. Plants need stable temperatures. The temperatures on Mercury vary from 400 degrees Celsius during the day, to -200 degrees Celsius at night. Any plants on its surface, living or dead, would either freeze or catch fire.
Q. How long would a human survive on Mercury?
The conditions on this world allude to Mercury, where the days are extremely hot, the nights extremely cold, and humans live for only eight days.
Q. How long would you survive on Mercury?
But Mercury does rotate, just incredibly slow. At its current rotational velocity, it takes about 176 Earth days to experience one Mercurian day-night cycle. But you wouldn’t make it to the next day because you would die in about two minutes due to freezing or burning up.
Q. How long would a human survive on Mars without a spacesuit?
Without your spacesuit, you’d either freeze or instantly turn into a carbon brick, depending on which side of the planet you were standing on. If you were to venture there without any gear, you would survive for less than 2 minutes, provided that you held your breath!
Q. How much longer can earth support life?
In 300 million years or less, it may become very inhospitable for life to continue to exist on the land, and if we leave it alone, evolution may encourage life to return to the sea where the climate will be a bit more moderate. As for humans, we may adapt to living on the land, or we may decide to leave the planet.