No AICTE ISNT APPROVEC BUT DEC APPROVED
No, there have been no human landings on Neptune for the following reasons: - Technology. We currently do not have the technology to build space shuttles capable of travelling further than our own orbit and moon. - Temperature. Planet Neptune is freezing. Any human who gets close to the planet would freeze to death in seconds. Any electrical equipment would also freeze, jam and malfunction. - Distance. Neptune is millions of miles away. It would take years to get there if we had the capability to. However Neptune has been explored with unmanned exploration satellites.
The closest distance of earth and neptune is 4.301 billion kilometers and the farthest distance of earth and neptune is 4.553 billion kilometers. So, the time to reach Neptune ranges from 8.602 hours to 9.106 hours.
Unfortunately, no one has ever visited Neptune as we currently lack the technology to venture out that far into space. Did you know that the Voyager 2 was the first and only spacecraft to ever visit the planet?
Unfortunately Mars is cold, but Neptune is extremely cold. Therefore Mars is so likely like Earth that scientists think there might be living things on Mars. Neptune is more likely impossible to live on therefore you will need quite a lot of the technology to live or even go to Neptune. Edit: Also Mars is a solid rocky world, whereas Neptune is mainly gas, fluids and so on.
No. The best information about the planet comes from the probe Voyager 2, which passed near Neptune in August 1989. It has been studied telescopically from Earth orbit by the Hubble Telescope and from Earth observatories using adaptive optics technology.
No.UPTU allws only those students who have completed three year diploma approved by BTE UP or from a recognised university. p.singh.MATHURA
totally illegal college.only sunderdeep group of institutions ,gzb is a legal college of UPTU.thanks
Neptune Technology Group was created in 1892.
you can use the technology they have now a days.
To live on neptune you would have to bring oxygen, food, water, first aid kit and lots more especially a parachute harness for safety.
No, there have been no human landings on Neptune for the following reasons: - Technology. We currently do not have the technology to build space shuttles capable of travelling further than our own orbit and moon. - Temperature. Planet Neptune is freezing. Any human who gets close to the planet would freeze to death in seconds. Any electrical equipment would also freeze, jam and malfunction. - Distance. Neptune is millions of miles away. It would take years to get there if we had the capability to. However Neptune has been explored with unmanned exploration satellites.
Currently, Neptune has 13 known moons, or satellites. Technology is making it easier for scientists to discover more about deep space so more may be uncovered in the future.
The closest distance of earth and neptune is 4.301 billion kilometers and the farthest distance of earth and neptune is 4.553 billion kilometers. So, the time to reach Neptune ranges from 8.602 hours to 9.106 hours.
Unfortunately, no one has ever visited Neptune as we currently lack the technology to venture out that far into space. Did you know that the Voyager 2 was the first and only spacecraft to ever visit the planet?
Unfortunately Mars is cold, but Neptune is extremely cold. Therefore Mars is so likely like Earth that scientists think there might be living things on Mars. Neptune is more likely impossible to live on therefore you will need quite a lot of the technology to live or even go to Neptune. Edit: Also Mars is a solid rocky world, whereas Neptune is mainly gas, fluids and so on.
Neptune was the first planet discovered using mathematics rather than observation (1846). That's not exactly "technology, but it's the only thing i can think of.-Akilae
No. The best information about the planet comes from the probe Voyager 2, which passed near Neptune in August 1989. It has been studied telescopically from Earth orbit by the Hubble Telescope and from Earth observatories using adaptive optics technology.