Because the gas giants have enormous atmospheres and what we see is the top of the dense cloudy atmosphere, which people cannot stand on. Beneath that the rock surface is so deep down that the atmospheric pressure would crush any machine.
•I think the planet Eris could not support life because it is too cold to have water, but it does have ice. Even if the ice were to melt (which it wouldn't because its cold) it would just freeze back up again because the planet is too cold to keep it in its liquid state. So no, the planet could not support life.
Saturn is just a frozen gas giant planet. They only life that could live there, is the type of life we have never seen on the planet Earth.
Potentially. A Goldilocks planet is a planet that orbits in its star's habitable zone, meaning it is at the right distance that temperatures could support liquid water. This does not necessarily mean that the planet is in that temperature range, as temperature also depends on the composition and density of the planet's atmosphere and even how light or dark the planet's surface is. Even if temperatures are in the right range, that still does not guarantee that the planet could support life.
No, Sedna is a dwarf planet located in the outer reaches of the solar system and does not have an atmosphere that could support human respiration.
Earth is the most habitable planet in the solar system, which is why there is so much life on it. As far as we know, no other planet has life on it. Mars could possibly support human life, with supports to help them.
It's an element, not a compound, it could never be a rock but could turn into a gas if it got hot enough. So it would be mostly gas out of those two. If you mean solid or gas, It freezes at -38.83 degrees Celsius and evaporates at 356.73 degrees. I seriously doubt anybody will need to know this.
The inner or terrestrial planet that we could most likely live on is Earth. Mars would be a far distant second.
As far as is known there isn't one. Certainly there is no other planet in our solar system capable of sustaining life. It is quite likely there are other planets elsewhere which could support life but we do not have the ability to either find or travel to them.
first, there is "your mom." second, there are "your two dads." Lastly it could be in your ****.
As yet we do not believe that any other planet can support life. However there is evidence to suggest mars once did.
No star itself could support life, but a planet around a star like our own and as far away as Earth may have some sort of life on it.
No other planet in our solar system could support advanced life such as on Earth. Others could support UNintelligent life. Planets in other galaxies that may support life are: OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb , Gliese 581 c, and Gliese 581 d.
•I think the planet Eris could not support life because it is too cold to have water, but it does have ice. Even if the ice were to melt (which it wouldn't because its cold) it would just freeze back up again because the planet is too cold to keep it in its liquid state. So no, the planet could not support life.
Mars and Venus
So far no planet has been discovered that would support our kind of life, certainly not in our solar system
Not unaided. But this is no slight to the dwarfs; humans couldn't live on ANY other planet without substantial life support systems.
Saturn is just a frozen gas giant planet. They only life that could live there, is the type of life we have never seen on the planet Earth.