Let's say we Uranus is a gas giant primarily made up of hydrogen, helium, and methane. we breath oxygen so we would need oxygen tanks. There is also no solid ground on Uranus so our theoretical Uranus town would have to float. The people on the town would need to get used to seventeen hour days, and no seasons. Uranus is also very cold: over 200 degrees Celsius cold. with these facts: getting people to live on Uranus would be very unlikely at best, but Science Fiction writers can always dream.
No, humans could not survive on Uranus. The extreme cold temperatures, lack of breathable oxygen, and high levels of toxic gases such as methane and hydrogen make it inhospitable for human life without significant technological support.
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.
Well first of all, since the planets are almost perfect spheres, they have no 'sides'.You're probably thinking of Uranus, whose axis of rotation is tilted of 97.77°, andso is approximately parallel with the plane of the Solar System.
URANUSUranus
Neptune and Uranus both have high concentrations of methane in their atmospheres.
They could survive but if they don't have the right gear you couldn't survive on Uranus.
No, humans could not survive on Uranus. The extreme cold temperatures, lack of breathable oxygen, and high levels of toxic gases such as methane and hydrogen make it inhospitable for human life without significant technological support.
No no life has been detected on Uranus. No life form known is thought to be able to survive on Uranus..
No, it is not possible for a human to live on Uranus.
no
The best things to survive on Uranus are, oxygen, _wate_r, food, shelter.
Yes, you would not survive landing on Uranus. The planet's extreme atmospheric pressure, frigid temperatures, lack of a solid surface, and toxic gases would make it impossible for any human to survive a landing there.
No
Very slowly. Current technology can not get a human to Uranus (alive).
Since Uranus is a giant planet with massive gravity and an atmosphere poisonous to human life, and since no human has ever be to or near Uranus, there are no fun things that you can to there.
There is no "surface" of Uranus. It's a gas giant with an increasingly dense atmosphere as you penetrate the interior. If you were magically transported to the region of Uranus' atmosphere with a density similar to that of Earth, the temperature would be around 47 degrees Celsius (almost 120 F). Bearable. But the atmosphere is composed of Hydrogen and Helium which are impossible to breathe. So, the answer is "as long as you can hold your breath"!
no