It's a gas planet, so has no real solid surface. A man (after he's died from the cold) will just carry on falling into it until he becomes crushed by the pressure.
no, the rings of Saturn are made of ice and dust. we are way to dense and we will fall right through the rings, plus the ice particles are way too far away to jump on or anything. although that would be cool.
Since Uranus is a giant planet with massive gravity and an atmosphere poisonous to human life, and since no human has ever be to or near Uranus, there are no fun things that you can to there.
no
No person has ever been to the planet Uranus or even to the moons of the planet Uranus (which would be much easier to visit). Indeed, human beings have never been anywhere farther than the moon. Automated probes have been sent to the edge of the solar system and out into interstellar space, but human beings have not gone nearly that far.
Sort Of. No human can go out that far. The only thing that can reach Uranus is a probe. The only probe I know of to reach Uranus was Voyager 2.
If you mean the planet, there is no oxygen or enough heat to sustain life.
No, it is not possible for a human to live on Uranus.
no, the rings of Saturn are made of ice and dust. we are way to dense and we will fall right through the rings, plus the ice particles are way too far away to jump on or anything. although that would be cool.
No.
Humans cant walk through a jungle without getting hurt by animal's
they cant walk
Very slowly. Current technology can not get a human to Uranus (alive).
Since Uranus is a giant planet with massive gravity and an atmosphere poisonous to human life, and since no human has ever be to or near Uranus, there are no fun things that you can to there.
The gas giants - and this includes Uranus - DON'T have a surface you might walk on.
no
No human has, yet.
you cant walk on wheels