Faster than the speed of light.
2,000,000,000,000,000 years
it would take 7 years 8 months traveling by rocket at 7 miles per second when it is closest.
30,685 Earth days is not right it is 84.3 earth years so it is 30,769 and a half days
Winter on the planet Uranus lasts about 21 years, and leaves half the planet in darkness for nearly the entire time.
Just one spacecraft has visited Uranus. That was Voyager 2 Voyager 2, has now become an interstellar spacecraft. This means that it has left the solar system. If you are asking whether or not we have gone to Uranus with a rover, the answer is no. We are still putting more and more rovers on Mars, which is relatively close in comparison with Uranus. Mars takes about 8 and a half months to reach. If that is close than Uranus is REALLY far away. That means that if we haven't put a man on Mars, we definitely haven't put a man on Uranus.
Jupiter formed at the same time as the rest of our solar system, about 4.6 billion years ago.
Years ago, a spacecraft left Earth in 1977, and landed on Uranus in 1986...so depending on where the two planets are in their orbits, and what exact route would be chosen, it would take roughly nine and a half years.
it would take 7 years 8 months traveling by rocket at 7 miles per second when it is closest.
No. Uranus is a cold planet all around.
1/4: Half would be gone after a billion years and half of that would be gone in another billion years. 1/4: Half would be gone after a billion years and half of that would be gone in another billion years. 1/4: Half would be gone after a billion years and half of that would be gone in another billion years.
84.01 Earth years. It has just crossed into the northern half of its orbit and will remain there for the next 40 years.
30,685 Earth days is not right it is 84.3 earth years so it is 30,769 and a half days
Winter on the planet Uranus lasts about 21 years, and leaves half the planet in darkness for nearly the entire time.
Half a mile up yo....
it like a ring but half
Since a century is 100 years, half a century would be 50. So, the answer is 50 years.
Because Uranus' axis of rotation is in the plane of its orbit, the poles of the planet face the Sun. This means that each pole is illuminated for half of its 84.3 (Earth) year orbit, making a day on the planet last roughly 42 Earth years.
Uranus's moons are made up of half ice (with some ammonia and carbon dioxide) and half rock. Being so far away from the sun, it is extremely cold as well.