If you are a government interested in supporting the logistics of a scientific research station on the Antarctic continent, you fly the aircraft that is best suited for landing on ice and operating with jet fuels and hydraulics that can withstand extreme cold.
If you are a private party, you are best advised to work with an aviator with experience in extreme cold weather flying.
The Hercules and De Havilland Twin Otter are the commonest aircraft to fly to Antarctica.
Other frequent aircraft are the C-17 and C-141 of USAF and Boeing 757s and 767's of New Zealand and Australia's air forces and of various airlines.
they could fly it.
most people don't like going to Antarctica so they wouldn't fly over to Argentina. however you could row to Antarctica, (best take a coat)
If you could fly in a straight line, like a bird, according to Google Maps, you'd fly 7,879.796 miles from Connecticut to Palmer Station, Antarctica.
An aircraft is designed to fly in 'air' there is no 'air' in space.
Because you'd pay for the private airplane to fly you to Antarctica, you could land anywhere you wanted to land that was physically possible. There are no commercial flights to Antarctica.
If you were a bird and could fly in a straight line between Bejing, China and McMurdo Station, Antarctica, you'd fly 9,458.185 miles, according to Google Maps.
A properly designed aircraft most certainly can fly into the air.
Aircraft fly through air and spacecraft fly in space.
An aircrew are the people who fly an aircraft
If you could fly in a straight line, like a bird, according to Google Maps, you'd fly 9,106.596 miles to fly from London to the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula. The length of your trip, then, would depend on how fast you could fly. There are no commercial flights to and from Antarctica, so you could fly from London to any southern airport -- Chile, Argentina, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand -- and charter an airplane to take you to the continent.
No, airports are a place where aircraft fly to and from.
600,000 people fly to the Antarctica everyday. 35% are scientist.