Nobody has ever done that yet.
No human has, yet.
No space crafts have traveled to Uranus. The Voyager 2 spacecraft is the only spacecraft to have flown by Uranus, conducting a flyby in 1986 and capturing valuable data. No further missions to Uranus have been planned or launched.
no there hasnt been any robots or anything
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2.
You can't get there from here. The UK is a nation on the Earth. Uranus is a planet in the outer solar System. Only a few unmanned satellites have traveled from Earth to Uranus, and they have taken years.
Since it is so cold at Uranus any living being on Earth (humans pretty much, duhhh) would freeze in an instant
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.
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. It is too far to go there yet. It is about 3 billion miles away. It would take several life times to get there and back.
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.
no it is extremely cold and it has a greater gravitational pull and we humans cant take that plus there is no liquid water so we would die of thirst if not of cold or gravity and is made of gas
Uranus was named after the Greek god Uranus.