Yes, several Apollo astronauts walked on the moon during the course of several Apollo missions
in the 1960s and 70s.
Also it was proved on TV answering all questions about photos ect + lenses were left on the surface and one can send a laser light to the moon which would bounce back to earth. Someone would have needed to have taken the lenses to the moon for the experiment to work.
So far, no country other than the US has landed anyone on the moon.
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
no
The Moon is about 3.7 times smaller than the Earth
No
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.
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.
A moon is an object larger than about 50 miles across, which orbits a planet. Objects which orbit stars are called either planets, of if they are small, asteroids, or comets. So a moon does not orbit anything other than a planet.
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.
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.
No
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.
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.