A lander?
A flyby craft
The craft that took astronauts to the moon was called the Apollo spacecraft. It consisted of the command module, service module, and lunar module. The lunar module, known as the "LEM," was specifically designed to land on the moon's surface.
They don't. The shuttles were designed for Earth Orbit only.
Gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn doesn't have a solid surface for spacecraft to land on. Similarly, ice giants like Uranus and Neptune also lack a solid surface due to their thick atmosphere and icy composition. Consequently, spacecraft cannot land on these planets.
Most planets have a solid surface, an atmosphere, and orbit a star. They also vary in size, composition, and distance from their star.
The space shuttle landed on Earth, so yes.
A hovercraft or air-cushion vehicle (ACV) is a craft designed to travel over any ... in their ability to travel equally well over land, ice, and water
No. This would not be possible as Neptune is made up of gas and does not have an actual surface.
No, not yet. The MESSENGER mission has flown by Mercury three times, and is planned to land on the surface during 2010.
It has land, salt water, fresh water, lakes and springs. etc. go to Wickipida.com
The first American craft to soft-land on the moon was the Surveyor lunar probe.The first actual space craft to land on the moon was the Luna 2 made by the Soviet Union in 1959. The first manned ship to land on the moon was the Apollo 11 in 1969.
You can`t land on Jupiter. Jupiter,Satern,Uranus, and Neptune are all gas planets. Gas planets are planets that dont have land, the whole planet is filled with gas and liquids.