mars because the scientists
are searching right now
Planets travel in elliptical orbits.
No, there is more hydrogen on the Jovian planets then the terrestrial ones.
There are four planets called the "inner planets".Of those, Mercury is the innermost planet.From the sun the planets areMercuryVenusEarthMarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptunePluto
That doesn't make sense. There are stars, and there are planets. If you mean "planets around stars, other than the Sun", those are usually called "extrasolar planets" or "exoplanets".
Ancient India discovered only 5 planets without a telescope, because they could see the planets with their eyes, just as we can. Those planets are:MercuryVenusMarsJupiterSaturn
because they feel like it
yes, yes you can
Of course we will. But shall we?
Mars is the next one on the agenda, at the moment.
It's not necessarily better, but it's the closest planet that we can get to.
In "The Host" by Stephenie Meyer, Wanderer visited a total of eight planets before arriving on Earth.
Potentially yes. We do not have the technology to get people out very far (maybe as far as Mars at present, but even that's debateable), but in theory we would be able to visit extra-solar planets as technology improves in the future.
Mars is the fourth planet in the solar system. for more help a bout planets please visit: http:/www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/astronomy/planets
because there is no air and the other planets are far away to visit.
If you visit the NASA website or even search for the "Milky Way", you can get a list of planets in our solar system. There are only 9 planets, 8 if you don't count dwarf planet Pluto.
No one visited Jupiter. It is too far away and we do not possess the technology to visit other planets, and they definitely didn't have that technology back in the 1630s
venus was the first planet visited by the American spacecraft