yes it can
No because there is nothing to land on. This is why they are called gas giants. They are made of only gas and maybe a few rocks. Also, some gas giants consist of deadly gas. Overall, it would be too dangerous to enter a gas giant, let alone try to "land" on one.
No because there is nothing to land on. This is why they are called gas giants. They are made of only gas and maybe a few rocks. Also, some gas giants consist of deadly gas. Overall, it would be too dangerous to enter a gas giant, let alone try to "land" on one.
Gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn doesn't have a solid surface for spacecraft to land on. Similarly, ice giants like Uranus and Neptune also lack a solid surface due to their thick atmosphere and icy composition. Consequently, spacecraft cannot land on these planets.
Gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn do not have a solid surface to land on because they are composed mostly of gas and liquid. Their outer layers consist of dense clouds of gas that gradually transition to liquid deeper within the planet. Attempting to land on a gas giant would be like trying to land on a thick, stormy atmosphere.
Exploratory probes cannot land on gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn because they lack a solid surface to land on. These planets are mostly composed of gas and liquid, making it impossible for a probe to land and collect data. Additionally, the extreme pressure and heat within the gas giants would destroy any probe attempting to land.
No, since they are composed strictly of gases and have no land to shift.
You cant land on a gas giant But probes have gone "inside" gas giants
The cores are so deep in the planets
which of the gas giants are made of frozen gas
The Gas Giants are mostly made up of gas.
no they are made of gas. which is why they are called GAS giants
Saturn is one of the gas giants and does not have a land surface in the way Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars do.