space station
I think No.
To travel to a planet, you would need a spacecraft capable of withstanding the conditions of space and the planet's environment, sufficient fuel for the journey, life support systems for the crew, navigation systems, and supplies for the mission. Additionally, detailed planning, communication systems, and knowledge of the planet's atmosphere and characteristics are essential for a successful mission.
Humans have not visited any planet. They have sent probes to several planets; the first to "land" ("crash into" would be a more accurate term) would be the Soviet Venera 3 which hit Venus in 1966. In 1971, another Soviet craft (Mars 3) landed on Mars.
It is assumed that somewhere, in the vastness of space, there may be another planet that can support life. Whether that life is one we would recognise is another matter.
Your mass would remain constant regardless of the planet you are on, as mass is a measure of the amount of matter in your body. However, your weight would change because weight depends on the gravitational force exerted on your mass, which varies from planet to planet. For instance, on a planet with stronger gravity, you would weigh more, while on a planet with weaker gravity, you would weigh less.
it would break or if a small planet bumped itnto juipeter, juipeter would have another moon.
No because if a mission would land there you would instantly die because it is a gas planet.
None of them. Pluto would be but it's not a planet.
A moon? I don't think a planet orbiting another planet would be called a planet.
We call that path the "orbit" of the orbiting body. Note: You would not ever see a planet orbiting another planet. At least, if you did, you would not call them both planets.
I think No.
another planet
I would search the planet. Observe it. Comare it from earth. Try to find aliens. Dance. Jump around. Breathe.
To travel to a planet, you would need a spacecraft capable of withstanding the conditions of space and the planet's environment, sufficient fuel for the journey, life support systems for the crew, navigation systems, and supplies for the mission. Additionally, detailed planning, communication systems, and knowledge of the planet's atmosphere and characteristics are essential for a successful mission.
You shall crush aliens!
Yes. The planet would freeze solid. Also, the planet would hurtle out of control with nothing to orbit around. We would also likely crash into another planet.
No. If Ceres orbited a planet it would be a moon. It orbits the sun, so it is classified as a dwarf planet.