It would be impossible for humans to land on Jupiter, Saturn or Uranus. As a group, these planets are referred to as "gas giants". If any of them has a solid surface at all, it lies beneath thousands of miles of gas or liquid, in total dark and under temendous pressure.
The first humans to land on the moon were 0n 20/7/1969.
No. The rings are composed of ice and rock particles which orbit the planet. If in a area of the rings, if it was compact enough it would be could put a land rover on it.
No. Jupiter is a gas planet, so there is no surface to land on.
mars
No because Jupiter is a gas planet and if a shuttle landed to drop people off it would blow up.
It would be impossible to land on Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, or Neptune because none of these planets have definite surfaces.
No
In order to land on a planet, it has to have a solid outer crust. The only planets in the solar system with a solid outer core are the 4 inner planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars). The planets outside the Asteroid Belt are composed primarily of gas, which would make any landing impossible on those planets.
It is impossible to predict where a meteor will land or when it will land in a particular place, so your question cannot be answered.
No, because Uranus is a gaseous planet, which means it has no surface. Nowhere to land a spacecraft.
In theory, it would be possible to land on a planet without fling.
Most humans on Earth live on land, and many of them own land. Without land, humans would either have to live in underwater habitats or simply would not survive.
Humans have not visited any planet. They have sent probes to several planets; the first to "land" ("crash into" would be a more accurate term) would be the Soviet Venera 3 which hit Venus in 1966. In 1971, another Soviet craft (Mars 3) landed on Mars.
We could land on any of the inner planets, but we would need a few years to develop the required technology. There are already plans to visit Mars in thenext few decades.Venus would be particularly difficult because of the hostile conditions, but unmanned craft have already landed there. However, they didn't survive for very long.Based on what I know about humans, it would be technologically possible for usto land on any planet in our solar system that we wanted to badly enough.Based on what I know about the planets in our solar system, landing on anyplanet other than Earth would be irresponsible, and landing on Venus, Jupiter,Saturn, Uranus, or Neptune would be downright foolhardy suicide.The inner planet to stay away from is Venus, with its sulfuric acid clouds, and itssurface temperatures in the hundreds of degrees.
That's impossible, there are always a Candy-Land.
If by humans visiting you mean , Which planet's have had humans land on that planet the answer is none. The only other place in space that humans have visited is the moon.
Because Neptune is considered a gas giant. If we humans were to land on it, we would simply fly through because the planet is just made of of gasses and not solid material