no because of the heat and all the gas.
We do not have the technology for a manned mission presently.
Doubtful. At least for a manned mission. The planet Mercury is too close to the Sun and is therefor too hot for a manned mission to succeed.
No. It would be impossible to colonize Saturn even if a manned mission could get there, primarily because Saturn has no solid surface to build anything on.
There won't ever be a manned mission to Mercury but, hypothetically, just like all the other men & women that go into orbit or the moon, they'd simply be called astronauts.
There have been no manned missions to Mercury.
We can't colonize it because we can't land on it.
We do not have the technology for a manned mission presently.
Doubtful. At least for a manned mission. The planet Mercury is too close to the Sun and is therefor too hot for a manned mission to succeed.
None. We have not had a manned mission to Mercury yet. The space shuttle would be unable to make that type of trip.
There has never been a manned mission to Mercury to date.
Yes, if we wanted to devote the time and expense of such a mission. We could land an unmanned probe, or a manned mission, but a manned mission will mean that we will have to carefully plan the crew's safety during the blistering Mercurial day.
Not sure which mission this refers to, but there were 9 manned Mercury flights and 10 manned Gemini flights prior to the beginning of Project Apollo.
no, the first successful manned mission to the moon was apollo mission 11.
No. It would be impossible to colonize Saturn even if a manned mission could get there, primarily because Saturn has no solid surface to build anything on.
All Apollo missions were manned.
On 5 May, 1961 Alan Shepherd was launched on a sub-orbital flight into space aboard Freedom 7, the first manned mission of Project Mercury.
Project Mercury's first manned mission, MR-3 (callsign Freedom 7), launched using a Mercury-Redstone rocket and carrying Astronaut Alan B. Shepard, was flown on May 5, 1961. The entire suborbital flight lasted just 16 minutes, and achieved an altitude of just over 116 miles.