No, Uranus is completely gaseous and has no land that would slide. Walking on Uranus would be like walking on a cloud, only much stinkier because there is a lot of methane.
yes there has been
No. Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune do not have any solid land.
no
No, it is not currently possible for a spacecraft to land on Uranus because of its lack of a solid surface. Uranus is a gas giant composed mostly of hydrogen and helium, with no firm ground to land on. Any probe sent to Uranus would have to study the planet from its atmosphere or orbit.
no there havn't been any
No, there have not been any space missions that have visited Uranus. The Voyager 2 spacecraft is the only spacecraft to have passed by Uranus, conducting a flyby in 1986. There are currently no upcoming missions planned to visit Uranus.
a) Because Uranus is to cold b) Because there isn't any oxygen on Uranus c) because as far as research is concerned there hasn't been any sort of plant or food that grows on Uranus
no the planet is made of gas so no landforms are on it
There hasn't but in the future maybe.
Uranus does not have any significant landforms like mountains or valleys as it is a gas giant composed mostly of hydrogen and helium. Its surface is mainly a layer of clouds and its atmosphere extends gradually into its interior without a distinct boundary.
No. Voyager 2 flew past it though.
no there are not any storms on uranus