you would a suit made of plutonium at least make one cycle around jupiter..but to crash into the watery surface of Jupiter you need a suit made completely of dark matter.
It depends on the size of the vessel and the kind of propulsion used... so I can't really give an answer. On a side note 90-95% of a spacecraft's fuel is used to break earth's gravity, once in space it takes very little fuel to move a large distance.
Well, unless NASA has been keeping some major interplanetary travel secrets, no human has set foot on Jupiter. It's a gas giant with no solid surface, so landing there would be like trying to land on a fluffy cloud. Stick to exploring Earth for now, trust me.
space shuttles fix all kinds off satelites they help fix any kind of spacecraft.the space shuttles have been launching since 1977 from NASA.space shuttles are very useful space craft to help fix things in outer space .by George Philip if you like space shuttles a lot there is a Lego set
Jupiter's atmosphere is primarily composed of hydrogen and helium, with smaller amounts of methane, ammonia, and water vapor. The high concentration of hydrogen and helium gives Jupiter its characteristic colors and properties.
Even if the Shuttles were still operating, which they're not, they wouldn't be able to reach Pluto; no currently existing or planned craft is sufficient for a manned mission to even Jupiter, which is much closer and much more interesting.
No dog is capable of flying any kind of space craft
operate or work aboard space craft
you would need a [jetpack]
Russian's Sputnik, was the first artificial Earth satellite.
Jupiter has a big red spot. It is not just any old spot though, it is some kind of on-going tornado. If you head directly to it & reach Jupiter's atmosphere, you will be sucked into the dot (or tornado) and probably die...
So far, no explorations have been made on Jupiter. Not even the most sophisticated space programs in the world are able to make that kind of voyage at this time.
Trick question, what kind of gas? Petroleum is not used in space travel as a propellent
Jupiter's precipitation is snow and ice.
None. Jupiter is a gas planet.
Um kind of. I am not sure of what you mean by "space rock" but yes, I guess. An asteroid is bits of rock that did not form a planet found in a belt between Mars and Jupiter! I hope this helped!
No. The USSR was the first to launch any kind of space craft with the launch of "Sputnik 1" in 1957. The US was the first to send a man to the moon in 1969 with the Apollo 11 mission