75years
No astronaut has travelled to a different planet. If they were to do so it would be for exploration and exploitation. Astronauts are known to explore and travel for the benefit of the others.
It would take a space shuttle around 9 years to travel from Earth to the planet Uranus. The actual duration would vary based on the specific trajectory taken and the speed of the spacecraft.
the planet uranus would be around your guts
Nobody has ever been to Uranus. It is much too far away for humans to travel there with our currently technology. It would take years to get there and years to get back. That presents many problems that we are not capable of overcoming now. Only space probes have been sent to it.
Traveling to Uranus by car is not possible. Uranus is a planet in our solar system, and the distances involved are far beyond what any car could travel. It would take years, even with advanced spacecraft, to reach Uranus.
The time it takes to travel from Saturn to Uranus varies depending on the positions of the planets in their orbits. On average, a spacecraft traveling at a speed of about 20 km/s would take around 6-7 years to reach Uranus from Saturn.
If a human were to travel to Uranus, they would immediately choke, or freeze. This would happen because of the low temperatures, and the low amount of oxygen.
It depends upon the speed of travel. The fastest current spacecraft (in 2012) would take about 5 years to travel there directly, provided it was at its closest distance to Earth (the distance can vary from about 2.6 billion kilometers to 3.1 billion kilometers).
The speed required to reach Uranus in nine and a half years would depend on the position of the planets at the time of departure. On average, a spacecraft would need to travel at a speed of around 21 km/s (47,000 mph) to reach Uranus in that timeframe, assuming a direct trajectory.
it would take 15 years, if going at 20,000 mph.
Assuming you only want to drive around Uranus (and not try to get there), it would take approx 66 days.
It depends upon the speed of travel. The fastest current spacecraft (in 2012) would take about 5 years to travel there directly, provided Uranus was at its closest distance to Earth (the distance can vary from about 2.6 billion kilometers to 3.1 billion kilometers).