In no particular order: # Protection from solar radiation. # Protection from impacts by objects in orbit. # Food, water, oxygen. # Processing of wastes. # Boredom. # Maintaining temperature at tolerable levels.
Why would anyone care!
No. We have sent space probes to Saturn, but a manned mission is not possible with today's technology and likely will not be possible within the lifetime of anyone alive today.
So far, the density of Saturn has never had the slightest effect whatsoever on any human, since no human has ever been significantly closer to Saturn than you are right now. In terms of the closest that Saturn can ever get to the earth, the farthest from earth that any human being has ever traveled into space is roughly 0.032 percent of that distance.
There are no known people living on Saturn as it is a gas giant and not hospitable to human life. Anyone living there would face extreme temperatures, high winds, and lack of a solid surface.
Four spacecraft have been sent to Saturn: Pioneer 11, Voyager 1, Voyager 2, and the Cassini-Huygens mission. Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 made flybys of Saturn while the Cassini-Huygens mission orbited the planet for over 13 years, studying its moons and rings in detail.
No. Nobody has traveled farth than the far side of our own Moon.
not sure
Nobody has visited Saturn.
It would make them heavier.
cassinni has and in 2004
No human has, yet.
The moon
If anyone has, it was never reported to anyone else. As far as is known, nobody ever traveled through time. And as far as is known to modern scientific theory, it's not possible.
No, it's too hot.
Yes. The Cassini has been orbiting Saturn since 2004. Saturn was also visted by Pioneer 11 in 1979, Voyager 1 in 1980, and Voyager 2 in 1981.
yes if they want
It was the Saturn 5 rocket, the spacecraft was called the Apollo mission.