They don't. We do not have any plans for visiting Venus, and the extreme heat and pressure makes it unlikely that we ever will.
The most 'ancient' cosmonaut/astronaut was Yuri Gagarin in 1961. Much was known about Venus then. Though through space probes and craft that have landed on Venus since our knowledge has grown.
No one has been on Venus
No. The space shuttle was designed for low-Earth orbit, not travel between planets. Currently there are no manned spacecraft capable of interplanetary travel. Venus is much too hot for people to survive there
No astronaut has visited Venus yet.
Astronauts have not visited Venus. Venus has an extremely inhospitable climate. Probes barely survive the descent. Humans would stand no chance.
No, because of the extreme heat, the thick atmosphere, and the long term trip for the astronaut.
they dry it out
The most 'ancient' cosmonaut/astronaut was Yuri Gagarin in 1961. Much was known about Venus then. Though through space probes and craft that have landed on Venus since our knowledge has grown.
No
Astronaut did not land in Venus because the planet is hot. If the astronaut land on Venus, they will burn their selfs.
2,000,000,000 B.C.!
No one has been on Venus
No. The space shuttle was designed for low-Earth orbit, not travel between planets. Currently there are no manned spacecraft capable of interplanetary travel. Venus is much too hot for people to survive there
No astronaut has visited Venus yet.
Venera visited Venus on 1965
Astronauts have not visited Venus. Venus has an extremely inhospitable climate. Probes barely survive the descent. Humans would stand no chance.
Yes, astronauts can visit the moon at any phase of the lunar cycle. The visibility of the moon's surface features may vary depending on the phase, but this does not prevent astronauts from landing or exploring the moon.