No, because Jupiter is a gas planet. If you landed on it, you would fall right through it and somewhere in the planet, you'd explode!
No. Jupiter does not have a solid surface. There is nothing to land on.
It is highly unlikely that humans will ever go to Jupiter due to its extreme radiation levels, lack of a solid surface, and harsh environment. Sending humans to Jupiter would present numerous technical challenges and risks that currently make it impractical for manned missions.
As Jupiter is a gas giant, no land. Just gas. It does have a liquid core. See the related link for more information.
because Jupiter is gassy
no
nobody ever landed on Jupiter
No space shuttle has ever been to Jupiter
No one has landed on Jupiter and it is unlikely they ever will.
No one has ever been to Jupiter. At least not yet.
No,, there have never been, nor will there ever be rovers on Jupiter. Jupiter is a gas planet. It has no surface on which to land. However, a rover might one day land on one of Jupiter's many moons.
There are many reasons. The most obvious is that Jupiter has no land to land on. It is a gas planet. It also emits enormous amounts of radiation and is very far away.
There are no land features on Jupiter as there is no solid surface. The closest thing you could get is a cloudscape. We do no know what this looks like as no pictures have ever been taken from within Jupiter's atmosphere.
yes one did 5 years ago
Jupiter has 1K km of land per dicks you have. Jupiter is 48 trillion km in land
No. Nothing can land on Jupiter as it does not have a solid surface. The Galileo spacecraft orbited Jupiter from 1995 until 2002. In 1995 an atmospheric probe with the Galileo mission entered Jupiter's atmosphere to study it. The probe eventually melted as it entered the superheated layers deep in Jupiter's atmosphere. In 2002 the main Galileo space probe burned up in Jupiter's atmosphere at the end of its mission.
Jupiter is a gas planet. There is nothing to land on.
No. Jupiter does not have a solid surface. There is nothing to land on.