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{{Planet-Stub}}
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[[Image:MarsScrshot.jpg|thumb|right|Mars in Orbiter]]
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Mars is the 4th planet from the [[Sun]]. It has two natural satellites.
  
{| cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" style="margin:25px 0 0 10px; border:3px solid lightsteelblue;width:250px; font-size:90%; font-family:'Arial','Helvetica'; float: right; clear: right;"Template in Orbiter"
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Go to [[:Category:Addons for Mars|Addons for Mars]]
!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2" align="center" |Mars
 
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|colspan="2" align="center"|[[Image:MarsScrshot.jpg|240px]]
 
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|colspan="2" align="center"|'''Mars in Orbiter 2016 with D3D9'''
 
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!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Designation
 
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|Name||align="right"|Mars
 
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|width="30%"|Reference body||align="right" width="30%"|Sun
 
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|width="30%"|Number of satellites||align="right" width="30%"|
 
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!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Planetary mean orbits
 
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|width="30%"|Epoch||align="right" width="50%"|J2000 (1 January 2000)
 
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|width="30%"|Semimajor axis (a)||align="right" width="50%"|1.52366231 AU <br> (2.279366372×10<sup>11</sup> km)
 
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|width="30%"|Eccentricity (e)||align="right" width="30%"|0.09341233
 
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|width="30%"|Inclination (i)||align="right" width="30%"|1.85061° <br> (0.0322992 radian)
 
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|width="30%"|Longitude of the ascending node (LAN, ☊)||align="right" width="30%"|49.57854° <br> (0.8653088 radian)
 
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|width="30%"|Longitude of periapsis (ϖ)||align="right" width="30%"|336.04084° <br> (5.865019 radian)
 
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|width="30%"|Mean longitude (L)||align="right" width="30%"|355.45332° <br> (6.203831 radian)
 
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!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Planetary orbital element centennial rates
 
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|width="30%"|Semimajor axis (a)||align="right" width="50%"|-0.00007221 AU/Century
 
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|width="30%"|Eccentricity (e)||align="right" width="50%"|-0.00011902 Century<sup>-1</sup>
 
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|width="30%"|Inclination (i)||align="right" width="30%"|-46.94 seconds/Century
 
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|width="30%"|Longitude of the ascending node (LAN, ☊)||align="right" width="30%"|-1020.19 seconds/Century
 
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|width="30%"|Longitude of periapsis (ϖ)||align="right" width="30%"|1560.78 seconds/Century
 
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|width="30%"|Mean longitude (L)||align="right" width="30%"|68905103.78 seconds/Century
 
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!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Selected physical parameters
 
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|width="30%"|Mean radius||align="right" width="30%"|3389.92±0.04 km
 
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|width="30%"|Mass||align="right" width="30%"|6.418542×10<sup>23</sup> kg
 
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|width="30%"|Density||align="right" width="30%"|3.9335±0.0004 g/cm<sup>3</sup>
 
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|width="30%"|Sidereal rotation period||align="right" width="30%"|24.622962 hours
 
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|width="30%"|Sidereal orbit period||align="right" width="30%"|1.88071105 years
 
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|width="30%"|Magnitude V(1,0)||align="right" width="30%"|-1.52
 
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|width="30%"|Geometric albedo||align="right" width="30%"|0.15
 
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|width="30%"|Equatorial gravity||align="right" width="30%"|3.69 m/s<sup>2</sup>
 
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|width="30%"|Escape velocity||align="right" width="30%"|5.027 km/s
 
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!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Rotation elements
 
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|width="30%"|North pole right ascension (α<sub>1</sub>)||align="right" width="30%"|317.61°
 
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|width="30%"|North pole declination (δ<sub>1</sub>)||align="right" width="30%"|52.85°
 
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|width="30%"|Obliqutiy of ecliptic||align="right" width="30%"|26.72°
 
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|width="30%"|Longitude of Sun's transit||align="right" width="30%"|262.78°
 
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!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Atmospheric parameters
 
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|width="30%"|Surface Pressure||align="right" width="30%"|0.61 kPa (variable)
 
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|width="30%"|Surface Density||align="right" width="30%"|~0.020 kg/m<sup>3</sup>
 
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|width="30%"|Scale height||align="right" width="30%"|11.1 km
 
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|width="30%"|Average temperature||align="right" width="30%"|~210 K
 
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|width="30%"|Wind speeds||align="right" width="30%"|0-30 m/s
 
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!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Ecliptic position from primary*
 
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|width="30%"|Note||align="right" width="30%"|*Elements given are from Orbiter.pdf (2016)
 
|}
 
 
 
'''Mars''' is the fourth planet from the sun and the second smallest planet, larger than only [[Mercury]]. Its characteristic red color is due to the iron oxide on its surface. Mars is a terrestrial planet with a very thin atmosphere, its surface features are impact craters, valley, deserts, as well at polar ice caps. The days on Mars are just a bit longer than the [[Earth|Earth's]] as the rotation period and obliquity are similar, and its orbital period is roughly twice as long.
 
 
 
== Physical characteristics ==
 
The diameter of Mars is roughly half that of the [[Earth]], and is less dense, with a surface gravity of about 0.38 G. As a result of the Late Heavy Bombardment, more than half of the surface of Mars contains craters. The remaining surface consists of deserts, volcanoes, and two polar ice caps consisting of mostly water ice and CO<sub>2</sub> ice.
 
 
 
The atmospheric pressure is about 1% that of the Earth at sea level, and consists of mostly carbon dioxide, argon, and nitrogen with just a trace of oxygen and water, along with dust.
 
 
 
 
 
'''Mars''' is the fourth planet from the Sun in the Solar System and the second-smallest solid planet. Mars is a cold terrestrial planet with polar ice caps of frozen water and carbon dioxide. It has the largest volcano in the Solar System, and some very large impact craters. Mars is named after the mythological Roman god of war because it appears of red colour. john lennon lives on mars
 
 
 
== Rotation and orbit ==
 
The semimajor axis of Mars is about 228 million kilometers (143 million miles) and its orbital period is about 687 earth days or 670 Mars sols, orbital inclination is 1.85° from the ecliptic, and orbital eccentricity is about 0.093, one of the highest in the solar system.
 
 
 
Mars' sol (day) is a bit longer than that of the earth, about 24½ hours, it's axial tilt is about 25°, similar to the Earth.
 
 
 
Mars has two moons, [[Phobos]] and [[Deimos]], very small bodies, which may be captured asteroids. Phobos revolves around Mars in just 11 hours, where Deimos orbits in about 30 hours.
 
 
 
== Mars in Orbiter ==
 
Mars has been a part of Orbiter since the earliest version, Orbiter 2001. In Orbiter 2001, the orbital motion of Mars was defined in the Mars.cfg file. From Orbiter 2002 onward, it has been defined in the Vsop87.dll file.
 
 
 
=== Olympus ===
 
The stock Orbiter2016 includes Olympus base, located at 135.43°W, 12.74° N, with three pads and a VOR transmitter.
 
 
 
=== Orbiter versions and add-ons ===
 
 
 
{|class="wikitable sortable” style="text-align: center"
 
|-
 
|colspan="8"|<center>'''Orbiter versions and add-ons which include Mars'''</center>
 
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!Add-on!!Source!!Version!!Author!!Type!!Release Date!!Compatibility!!Wiki article
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2016-torrent-files.5427/ Orbiter 2016 - torrent files]||O-F Resources||2016||martins||Orbiter Download||23 August 2016||Orbiter 2016||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2016-core-msi-exe-edition.5426/ Orbiter 2016 Core - MSI / EXE edition]||O-F Resources||2016||martins||Orbiter Download||23 August 2016||Orbiter 2016||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2016-core-zip-edition.5425/ Orbiter 2016 Core - ZIP edition]||O-F Resources||2016||martins||Orbiter download||23 August 2016||Orbiter 2016||
 
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|[http://orbit.medphys.ucl.ac.uk/download.html Orbiter core package download]<br>(The actual download page for Orbiter 2016)||Orbiter download page||Orbiter 2016||martins||Orbiter download||23 August 2016||Orbiter 2016||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/celestial-bodies-motion-part-1-4-v2-0-0.132/ Celestial Bodies Motion - Part 1/4 - v2.0.0]||O-F Resources||v2.0.0||cristiapi||Scenery||2 July 2015||*module only||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2010-p1.5428/ Orbiter 2010-P1]||O-F Resources||100830||martins||Orbiter Download||30 August 2010||Orbiter 2010-P1||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2010.5429/ Orbiter 2010]||O-F Resources||100606||martins||Orbiter Download||5 June 2010||Orbiter 2010||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2006-p1.5430/ Orbiter 2006-P1]||O-F Resources||060929||martins||Orbiter Download||29 September 2006||Orbiter 2006-P1||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2006.5431/ Orbiter 2006]||O-F Resources||060504||martins||Orbiter Download||4 May 2006||Orbiter 2006||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/the-outer-planets-050223-update.2483/ The Outer Planets 050223 Update]||O-F Resources||2005-02-23||VF2_Rolf||Scenery||23 February 2005||||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/2005-with-p1-patch-files.5432/ 2005 (with P1 patch files)]||O-F Resources||050216||martins||Orbiter Download||16 February 2005||Orbiter 2005||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2003-p2.5433/ Orbiter 2003-P2]||O-F Resources||031217||martins||Orbiter Download||17 December 2003||Orbiter 2003-P2||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2003-p1.5434/ Orbiter 2003-P1]||O-F Resources||031105||martins||Orbiter Download||5 November 2003||Orbiter 2003-P1|
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2002.5436/ Orbiter 2002]||O-F Resources||020419||martins||Orbiter Download||19 April 2002||Orbiter 2002||
 
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|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/orbiter-2001.5437/ Orbiter 2001]||O-F Resources||010503||martins||Orbiter Download||3 May 2001||Orbiter 2001||
 
|}
 
  
 
==Natural satellites==
 
==Natural satellites==
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* [[Deimos]]
 
* [[Deimos]]
  
== See also ==
 
*[[w:Mars|Mars]] at Wikipedia
 
 
== Gallery ==
 
<gallery widths="100" heights="100">
 
MarsOrbiter2001.jpg|<center>Mars in Orbiter 2001</center>
 
MarsOrbiter2002.jpg|<center>Mars in Orbiter 2002</center>
 
Mars-orbiter2002p3.jpg|<center>Mars in Orbiter 2002P3</center>
 
Mars-Orbiter2003P2.jpg|<center>Mars in Orbiter 2003P2</center>
 
Mars-Orbiter2005P1.jpg|<center>Mars in Orbiter 2005P1</center>
 
Mars-Orbiter2006P1.jpg|<center>Mars in Orbiter 2006P1</center>
 
Mars-Orbiter2010P1-Orbiter2010P1.jpg|<center>Mars in Orbiter 2010P1</center>
 
MarsScrshot.jpg|<center>Mars in Orbiter 2016 with D3D9</center>
 
Mars - August 30 2021 - Flickr - Kevin M. Gill.png|<center>Mars as seen by the [[w:Emirates Mars Mission|Hope]] orbiter</center>
 
Terrestrial planet size comparisons-2.jpg|<center>Inner Solar System bodies for size comparison<br>from left<br>Mercury, Venus, Earth, Moon, Mars, Ceres<br>from Wikimedia Commons</center>
 
InnerSolarSystem.jpg|<center>View of the inner Solar System showing the orbits of Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars<br>from JPL Horizons Orbit Viewer</center>
 
</gallery>
 
 
{{SolarSystem}}
 
 
[[Category: Articles]]
 
 
[[Category:Celestial bodies]]
 
[[Category:Celestial bodies]]
[[Category:Solar System]]
 
[[Category: Planets]]
 

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