Close enough for good research, yes. One space probe has even been parachuted down into Jupiter's atmosphere and sent back information to earth.
No.
Jupiter has 2.5x Earths gravity, so it will be very hard to fly out of Jupiter from the strong gravitational pull.
Earth is like a spaceship because it holds people and goes through space like a spaceship.
The Galileo spacecraft is the only one to have actually entered an orbit around Jupiter, arriving in 1995 and studying the planet until 2003.
Jupiter Baudot goes by Jupiter.
Burn up
You cant land on Jupiter, it has no solid surface on which to land.
Discovery.
No spaceship has landed on Jupiter. It is not possible as it is a gas planet. Apart from fly- past spacecraft, only Galileo has orbited it in 1975. It released a probe into Jupiter's atmosphere which was crushed and probably vaporized.
Correct. Jupiter is a gas giant, so there is no solid surface to land on.
no
That will be the Juno space probe due to launch in 2011, reaching Jupiter in 2016.
They go through an air lock or depressurize the cabin and open the door.
One thing Galileo was famous for was studying Jupiter and its moons.
Jupiter has 2.5x Earths gravity, so it will be very hard to fly out of Jupiter from the strong gravitational pull.
47 minutes if you don't have to stop to pee.
To power up the spaceship, you need to go to Mordred's hideaway then get through the blockage. Then you will see a vent.(you need to go to the dungeons and flick the switch) Go through. Boom! get the stick and the co-ordinates under his bed. Get to the spaceship and do the co-ordinates. And off you go.
Any of the several probes and landers that have ever reported data from Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto, or beyond, had to pass through the asteroid belt.