You would need to be able to float due to to the gasses you would fall through and die halfway through the planet. Because the plant is gas and ice you would have to be able to breathe in carbon dioxide or helium.
technically it would be impossible to live on Uranus.
No
Well, honey, living on Uranus would be a real pain in the rear end. First off, you'd need a super thick and insulated spacesuit to survive the bone-chilling temperatures of -224 degrees Celsius. And don't forget to pack some serious wind-resistant gear, 'cause those gusts on Uranus can blow over 560 miles per hour. So, unless you're ready to embrace the cold, hard truth of living on Uranus, I'd stick to Earth for now.
You would need multiple coats to live on Uranus due to its extreme cold temperatures, averaging around -224 degrees Celsius. The exact number of coats would depend on the quality and thickness of the insulation in each coat.
There currently is no space suit that could overcome the high gravity of Uranus.
To determine the age of a 12-year-old on Uranus, you need to convert Earth years into Uranian years. A year on Uranus lasts about 84 Earth years. Therefore, a 12-year-old on Earth would be approximately 0.14 years old in Uranian years, which is about 1.7 months.
Every living creature needs oxygen to survive. Just as every living creature needs water to survive. For example, such as spiders. Yup, spiders do to need oxygen AND water to survive, and of course food. So the answer to your question would be yes, snails do need oxygen to survive.
No
The best things to survive on Uranus are, oxygen, _wate_r, food, shelter.
Just about everything. Including a closed space station that protects you from the poisonous and extremely cold atmosphere.
Let's say we Uranus is a gas giant primarily made up of hydrogen, helium, and methane. we breath oxygen so we would need oxygen tanks. There is also no solid ground on Uranus so our theoretical Uranus town would have to float. The people on the town would need to get used to seventeen hour days, and no seasons. Uranus is also very cold: over 200 degrees Celsius cold. with these facts: getting people to live on Uranus would be very unlikely at best, but science fiction writers can always dream.
Well, honey, living on Uranus would be a real pain in the rear end. First off, you'd need a super thick and insulated spacesuit to survive the bone-chilling temperatures of -224 degrees Celsius. And don't forget to pack some serious wind-resistant gear, 'cause those gusts on Uranus can blow over 560 miles per hour. So, unless you're ready to embrace the cold, hard truth of living on Uranus, I'd stick to Earth for now.
you need to have little fur unless your nocturnal; need to store water
Every living creature needs water to survive, so in that sense, yes. They also need water for food, because that is where their main source comes from. But they will not die if they don't swim.
it is usually cold on Uranus so if anyone was to go there they would need a thick space suit. you also need a heater or some other power source.
they need it to survive
water
You would need multiple coats to live on Uranus due to its extreme cold temperatures, averaging around -224 degrees Celsius. The exact number of coats would depend on the quality and thickness of the insulation in each coat.