No person has yet been to another planet, although travel to Mars is planned for the future. The first person to set foot on another celestial body was Neil Armstrong on July 20, 1969 when he walked on the moon.
it doesn't - the earth and other planets go round the sun
the first person to go on the moon was NEiL ARMSTRONG
it can affect the time bec. when the planet is near the sun it will rotates very fast than the other far planets....
the planets go around in circles around the sun
no. because the other planets are different distances away from the sun so it would take slightly longer for mars but quicker for Venus.
my inability to go to other planets. and gravity
You can go to planet lagos, but you have to go to the moon first and go into the juice bar and defeat 10 enimies then from there well you will know...
Our nine planets orbit around the Sun. Other planets that are light-years away orbit around their suns (A sun is just a large star with planets). Hope this helped!
First of all, gravity causes the orbital movement in the first place - due to the attraction by the Sun, the planets go around the Sun in ellipses. Because planets also attract each other, the orbits may gradually change over time.
They can't go "in" other planets, but they can land on other planets. Asteroid impacts can be minor, resulting in localized damage. They can also cause major damage, resulting in mass extinctions (in the case of Earth), large craters, magnetic anomalies, and varying crust thickness.
gravitational pull
moons go around planets and the sun
In the 16th century, Nicolaus Copernicus was the first to suggest the heliocentric model. His thought on the matter was that the sun was in the centre of universe, and that the earth, along with the other planets, rotated around it.
The planets would slowly start to randomly go in directions, eventually colliding into the sun, or other planets.
so they can go out on mars and other planets
it doesn't - the earth and other planets go round the sun
Mainly due to the distances involved. The planets are very close to our sun compared to other objects further out in other solar systems or galaxies. Light from our sun does go along way out, though becomes very feeble once you go out beyond the outermost planets in our solar system.