No so far no man has set foot on the planet Neptune.
No. The only (non-man-made) extraterrestrial (space, or non-Earth) object man has set foot on is the moon.
Charles Duke (Apollo 16) was the youngest man to set his foot on the moon. He was born in 1935 and set his foot on the moon in 1972.
It is not impossible for man to set foot on Mars. There just hasn't yet been a manned mission there.
Matthew Henson is not the first man to set foot on the moon, Neil Armstrong is
No so far no man has set foot on the planet Neptune.
No. The only (non-man-made) extraterrestrial (space, or non-Earth) object man has set foot on is the moon.
The American astronaut Neil Armstrong was the first man ever to walk on the moon.
We have sent robots to investigate.
No a man has not yet set foot on Saturn.
Charles Duke (Apollo 16) was the youngest man to set his foot on the moon. He was born in 1935 and set his foot on the moon in 1972.
The first person ever to set foot on the moon was a man named Neil Armstrong.
In this lifetime - all of them. Probably in this decade, none. Within this century, Mars is the most probable. Time is an incredibly long period and technology increases even faster. It is not inconceivable for Man to set foot on Mercury, Venus, Mars and even the dwarf planets and many of the moons. However, they will never be able to "set foot" on Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus nor Neptune because by definition there is no surface to "set foot" on. Float maybe, but not "set foot".
The first white man was Marco Polo, but the first Asian man to set foot in Asia is obviously unknown.
It is not impossible for man to set foot on Mars. There just hasn't yet been a manned mission there.
Matthew Henson is not the first man to set foot on the moon, Neil Armstrong is
Edwin Aldrin was the second man to set foot on the moon.