They would fall to the core because the planet's surface is made of gas but the core is made of iron and other minerals.
non
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2.
Voyager II came within 81,500 km of Uranus in January of 1986, on its way to Neptune. No human has ever gone farther than Earth's moon.
You would practically freeze.
Currently, the farthest a human has traveled into space is about 400,000 kilometers. That is the distance from the Earth to the Moon.
Human beings have traveled to space in low Earth orbit, with the furthest being to the moon during the Apollo missions in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Additionally, humans have visited the International Space Station (ISS) since the year 2000.
voyager 2 is the only spacecraft that visited Uranus by a third grader
dont no !
we could not live on Uranus because it is too far away from the sun and and we would need everything we have on Earth and approximately 4,000,000,000 space shuttles to get to Uranus
No man-made devices have landed on Uranus. The Voyager probes (I & II) both got close - but the moon Titan was considered more important than a surface landing on Uranus. Voyager I traveled to Titan, While Voyager II continued on into outer space.
No person has ever been to the planet Uranus or even to the moons of the planet Uranus (which would be much easier to visit). Indeed, human beings have never been anywhere farther than the moon. Automated probes have been sent to the edge of the solar system and out into interstellar space, but human beings have not gone nearly that far.
There are high probabilities of developing mental disorders (those associated with minimal social contact and confinement) and physiological degradation (lack of exercise and space to move; lack of strong gravity).