Only a good person can walk to the Sun for it is the Father of humanity and Earth is the Mother.
But some will tell you story like this one and it is funny:
There's no solid surface on the sun to walk on. Even putting the 6000 degree celcius surface temperature to the side the sun's surface gravity is so intense an ordinary human being would weigh over a ton. And forget about a return trip to Earth afterwards. The escape velocity from the sun is over 600 km/sec
and this:
We can't walk on the Sun.
So, we do not know who the first man to walk on the Sun was because he went there at night. He did not want to be caught, because he would have been in trouble
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There's no solid surface on the sun to walk on. Even putting the 6000 degree celcius surface temperature to the side the sun's surface gravity is so intense an ordinary human being would weigh over a ton. And forget about a return trip to Earth afterwards. The escape velocity from the sun is over 600 km/sec.
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We can't walk on the Sun.
So, we do not know who the first man to walk on the Sun was because he went there at night. He did not want to be caught, because he would have been in trouble.
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The correct answer is the little-known astronaut named Marvin J. Stephens. The reason his name is lost to history is the extreme secrecy of his mission to the Sun in 2007. Astronaut Stephens reached the surface in a specially-designed lander on September 24. After donning a sun-proof suit and heat-resistant boots he took mankind's first steps on the Sun.
Stephens' words upon stepping on the surface, though less profound than Neil Armstrong's "One small step for (a) man" is indeed memorable: "I am stepping out of the lander now. Man it is hot. It is freaking hot out here and my shoes are ohhhh.... Ahhhhhhh...... AHHHHHHH! followed by dead air. Cremation was instantaneous, followed by a short memorial service.