Humans wouldn't be able to survive on Europa unless they brought supplies such as food and water with them. They would also need a spacesuit (obviously). If we can survive in space alone on a space station, then I'm almost certain we can also survive on Europa. Also, since Jupiter sends out a lot of radiation, the things such as the spacesuit and the spaceship used to get there would have to be "radiation-proof" to make sure the humans don't die. After the colonists of Europa set everything up for their mission, they can begin using the ice on the surface to drink, water plants (that are grown in a greenhouse to feed the colonists), or make fuel for the spaceship to go back home. Another reason to go to Europa would be to drill through the surface to find liquid water and possible alien life. The problem with this is that the ice is predicted to be 65 miles thick on average (it will likely to be thinner if there are cracks in the ice). On earth we've only dug 7 miles at our deepest. However, it would be easier to dig on Europa because the gravity and pressure is much lower. The hardest and most expensive part is making the stuff to that would be in the Europa mission and sending it to Europa successfully.
I assume you mean on the moon Europa. Not without special equipment.
No 1 can survive on neptune
There is no way to survive on mercury
They could survive but if they don't have the right gear you couldn't survive on Uranus.
No, it's too hot for a human to survive!
No,human beings cannot survive on this planet because it does not have any solid surface.
Humans can Not survive on Saturn. The giant gas planet has a gravitational pull that would crush a human being in seconds. It is not possible for a human being to survive on Saturn for more than mere seconds.
No, human's can't survive on Pluto. There is almost no atmosphere, so you would have nothing to breathe. Also, it's way too cold for humans there.
No the heat would be to much pressure
Maggots would likely not survive in the harsh acidic environment of the human stomach. The stomach's acid and digestive enzymes would likely kill the maggots within a short period of time.
No, a human would not be able to survive in absolute zero conditions. Absolute zero is the lowest possible temperature where molecular motion ceases, which would lead to rapid cell death and tissue damage in a human body.
no