No one, because no one has travlled that far in a space craft.
Nobody has ever been to Uranus. It is much to far away for humans to travel there with the currently technology we have now. It would take a lot of years to get there and a lot of years to get back to o Earth.
Assuming the person's weight on Earth is 100 pounds, on Uranus, which has a lesser gravitational pull, that person would weigh approximately 89 pounds.
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.
the first person to go on the moon was NEiL ARMSTRONG
William Herschel is the person who discovered the planet Uranus. The discovery took place on March 13, 1781. Herschel also discovered two of its moons as well as two of Saturn's moons.
That has still to be decided.
The person who fist saw planet Uranus is WilliamHerschel.Actually John Flamsteed saw it first, but he didn't realiseit was a planet.
Uranus was first discovered by the German-born British astronomer William Herschel in 1781. Herschel is credited with being the first person to document the presence of Uranus in our solar system.
You can't "land" on a thing that has no surface. The giant planets - Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune - don't have a surface like Earth, rather, they are made up of atmosphere, that gets denser and denser as you go down.
No. The first person to look down discovered Earth.
He was the first person to discovery another planet (Uranus) since ancient times.
well just go on google and type in uranus and then click on uranus there you see uranus.
Not without substantial protection, much more than would be required to live on, say, the Moon. ("On" Uranus is a bit tricky in the first place, as there's some doubt as to whether Uranus even has an actual surface or not.)
nobody ever went on planet uranus
No astronaut has ever gone to Uranus.
Galileo was the first person to observe the four largest moons of Jupiter, now known as the Galilean moons (Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto), using a telescope in 1610. The moons of Uranus were discovered by Sir William Herschel in 1787, long after Galileo's observations.
His son Cronus/ Κρόνος was the person who overtrhrew Uranus with the help of his mother Gaea.