No. Johannes Kepler lived long before we had space travel. The Kepler telescope orbits the sun and was not designed to go to other planets.
Johannes Kepler knew of six planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.
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It was Johannes Kepler with his laws of planetary motion of 1618.
No, there is no known planet existing between Mars and Jupiter. Between Mars and Jupiter is an asteroid belt known as the Kepler belt.
no but mars rovers have
Johannes Kepler
Johannes Kepler knew of six planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.
he started eating bloody mars bars and sweets lol idk get the answer yourself
Kelper determined that the orbit of Mars orbit is not a circle but an ellipse.
It was Johannes Kepler with his laws of planetary motion of 1618.
-- If you want to send a space ship from the earth to, let's say, Mars, you need to know how Mars is going to move, so that you know what kind of transfer orbit to put the space ship into, and to be sure that Mars will be there when the ship gets there. Kepler's laws tell you how Mars moves. -- If you want to send a space ship from the earth to, let's say, Mars, you need to know how it will move once it leaves the earth and its rockets shut down. Kepler's laws tell you how the space ship is going to move. -- If an astronaut wants to put on his space suit, step out of the Shuttle, and take a little space-walk around, he'll want to know how HE will move once he's outside, so that he can be sure not to float too far away from the Shuttle. Kepler's laws tell how HE will move in his orbit around the earth.
Kepler used Tycho Brahe's data by developing his Laws of planetary motion and by analyzing his observations about planet's orbit.! :D
Copernicus's theory has the Sun at the centre but uses a model of circles and epicycles in the same way that the ancient Ptolemaic one used. Kepler continued to use the idea of having the Sun at the centre but, with the help of Tycho Brahe's new accurate observations, Kepler discovered that elliptical orbits allowed a better fit to the observed positions. Tycho instructed Kepler to work on the orbit of Mars, which was a real piece of luck because Mars's orbit is more elliptical than the other planets' orbits (except Mercury). This led Kepler to the idea of the ellipse, which is the model used today.
No, there is no known planet existing between Mars and Jupiter. Between Mars and Jupiter is an asteroid belt known as the Kepler belt.
No you will not explode if you go to Mars.
no
your mom she was the first to go to mars