yes you stupd dork
No, Galileo was an unmanned spacecraft that was launched by NASA in 1989 to study the planet Jupiter and its moons. It did not carry any astronauts on board.
No, Galileo was an unmanned probe. At this time, it is not possible for humans to travel to Jupiter.
Jupiters is a gas planet so there is no chance of landing on it. Several probes have been sent to Jupiter though, including Galileo which orbited it for a while and launched a probe into the planet (which was eventually destroyed). The Galileo vehicle eventually suffered the same fate.
yes
Galileo Galilei was an Italian scientist born in 1564. He is often depicted with a long beard, wearing traditional Renaissance attire. There are several paintings and sketches that provide visual representations of him.
No Apollo mission had any casualties. The Apollo 1 Fire was during testing, not a mission. The Apollo 13 explosion was tough... but no one died.
Gloves and boots are used for each and every mission in which astronauts are in space or on the moon. They are integral to any closed space suit. Without them astronauts would subjected to the vacuum of space and die almost instantly.
yes Galileo Galilie discovered Saturn
No, Saturn is a gas planet. Nothing can stand on gas planets.
The latest information about India is that they have a mission to the mars.
At the present time (2011), there is no program underway to develop a manned mission to Neptune, there is no research being done to advance the technology that it would require, there is no planning being done for such a mission, there is no funding for any research or planning with that purpose, there is no money in the US space program's budget for any activity aimed toward planning or developing such a mission, and at the moment, the US no longer has any ability to launch people into space. So at the present rate, it's liable to be a while.
Columbia's first mission, which was also the first flight of any space shuttle, began on April 12th, 1981. The space shuttle Columbia's last mission was launched on January 16, 2003 at 15:39:00 UTC.