Uranus is a gas giant, but the gas at the core is ice.
To illustrate that a solid object need not have a distinct inside and outside. This has important implications for topology.
not yet. Even if one could do that it would have been impossible to drive on uranus because uranus is a gas giant with no solid surface to drive on!
Outside - if they were inside, you would be blinded by the light.
You would find the area of the inside and outside shape (pretending that the inside shape was not in the outside shape). then, you would take the area of the outside shape and subtract the area of the inside shape.
No, it is currently not possible for humans to live on Uranus. The extreme cold temperatures, lack of a solid surface, high levels of methane and hydrogen gases in the atmosphere, and intense winds make it inhospitable for human life.
Uranus is a outer of asteroid belt because if it was inner that would be closer to the sun but, Uranus is outer because if it was inner the sun will melt Uranus cuz Uranus is made out of ice so Uranus is outer.
No. The only object that people have been to other than Earth is the moon. Uranus is much farther away. It would be impossible to walk on Uranus anyway as it is a gas planet with no solid surface.
No, not unless the person had very advanced life support systems. Uranus' atmosphere is toxic and very cold. It does not even have a solid surface.
Well the first question you need to ask yourself is: what makes something inside and what makes something outside...The actuall building would be outside but the inside of would...obviously...be inside...but it depends if you have a built in garage or one that is not attached to your house, one attached to a house would be inside
It is on the outside, because it is used to prevent people from entering the castle. If it was on the inside, there would be no use for it.
Not at all! Since Uranus is gaseous rather than solid, its force of gravity is actually less than Earth's. If you weighed 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh 86 pounds on the surface of Uranus, if you could find some place to stand on. You would freeze to death on Uranus, though, as the temperature is around -300 degrees F.
rocks?