No human has set foot on Jupiter. Earth is the only planet we have set foot on, and the moon the only natural satellite. Also, Jupiter is made of gas, so it has no surface
Unmanned probes have been further, is this what you meant? Pioneer 10 first flew a successful mission to Jupiter.
Jupiter can be seen in the sky at night without a telescope, people have known about Jupiter since the stone age.
A guy named Galein.
Humans have not been to Jupiter or any other planet, only the Earth and the Earth's moon. If they had, they still could not walk on the surface, since the surface of Jupiter is not solid.
Jupiter is the first of the outer planets
So far, no person has gone to Jupiter. Even sending unmanned probes is terribly expensive. I don't think our technology is advanced enough to send a person that far. It may be in a few years, but not yet.
the first person to go on the moon was NEiL ARMSTRONG
Jupiter is the 5th planet from the sun, and the first of the outer planets.
he was the first to see Jupiter
Galileo was probably the first to study Jupiter in detail, with his telescope.
It depends on how old you are when you go there (if you go there) and if you are born on Jupiter then it would matter when you where born and what year it was on Jupiter. But it will only matter if humans start habitating Jupiter. :)(:
Jupiter was first.
We have not reached Jupiter, yet. That will be the new Space Race
No person has been to Jupiter.
He was the first person on planet Jupiter!
Jupiter is plainly visibly to the naked eye and is one of the brightest objects in the night sky. It has no single discoverer.
NASA's Pioneer 10 spacecraft.
The first recorded observation of Jupiter was by Babylonian astronomers in the 7th century BCE. Since Jupiter is the fourth brightest object in the night sky, it has always been observed by mankind.
I'm sure you can see Jupiter with the naked eye if you're in the right place at the right time so I guess the right answer is the first person to look up at night and spot it.
Jupiter Baudot goes by Jupiter.