No
nagasaki
The Soviet Union had no authority over either the Moon or the United States. It was not for them to "allow" anything. We went when we we darn well felt like it and were ready. The first landing was July 20, 1969.
The immigrants who landed at Ellis Island near New York were processed much quicker than immigrants who landed at Angel Island near San Francisco. Angel Island immigrants were held to higher standards than those of Ellis Island.
Ireland is a separate country, not part of England or the UK.
yes Afghanistan and Iraq
So far, no country other than the US has landed anyone on the moon.
Human have landed on the Moon, not a planet. It was NASA's Apollo missions which successfully landed humans on the Moon from 1969 to 1972. No human has landed on any other planet besides Earth's Moon.
No Canadian has ever been on the moon or anyone of any other nationality other than Americans.
As far as is known to the public, the only spacecraft to have carried human beings more than a few hundred miles above the earth's surface ... including to lunar orbit or landing ... were those of the US' Mercury and Apollo programs.
Nobody has landed on Saturn yet. For that matter, nobody has landed on ANY planet other than Earth, only on the Moon. The first planet to land on is expected to be Mars.
No. We have sent probes to Jupiter, which have studied Jupiter and its moons, but nothing has landed on it. No human has gone farther than Earth's moon.
Eight space missions orbited the moon, carrying 24 astronauts. All were men from the USA who traveled to the moon as part of NASA's Apollo program during the period from 1968 to 1972. Six missions landed on the moon, and their 12 astronauts walked on its surface. No man walked on the moon more than once. And nobody except the 24 astronauts on the eight Apollo missions has ever been farther into space than "low earth orbit".
None. The only object other than Earth on which people have set foot is the moon. It would be impossible to walk on Jupiter as it does not have a solid surface.
Yes. 12 people have walked on the Moon, two people from each of 6 different missions that landed on it.
The moon does actually have a gravitational pull, just a lot lower than gravity on Earth. Also, the lunar landers were "aimed" at the moon and pushed there with rockets (thrusters) to get them there.
Because it's warmer in the winter than it is in the country.
Other than the earth, so far we've landed people on the moon, and landed robot probes on Mars and Venus and Mercury. The condions of the out planets mean a landing there is not likely soon, but we may be able to land on some of their moons.