Pioneer 11 visited Saturn in 1979, Voyager 1 in 1980, and Voyager 2 in 1981. These missions were fly-by missions, but Cassini-Huygens arrived in 2004 and is still operating from orbit around Saturn.
if you mean that anything Earth has sent up there, like a satellite, no. It's impossible to have anything land on the gas giant planets. This is because they are made up of liquids and gasses. No solids. Therefore, nothing can land on it ever
A space probe cannot land on Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and all the other gas giants in the universe because they are made of gas therefore there is no solid surface to land.
However, Pioneer 1, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2flew by Saturn in 1 September 1979, 12 November 1980 and 5 August 1981 (in the same order as the names) and Cassini orbited Saturn on 1 July 2004 and Huygens landed on Titan, Saturn's largest moon with possible life, on 14 January 2005.
No. We don't even know whether Saturn has any solid surface to land on.
If it has, the surface is under thousands of miles of 'atmosphere', and the
pressure is enough to crush barrels. Not a good place to land a space probe.
No! we've only gone as far as our own moon
No, and Saturn's atmosphere is so thick that nothing can land on its surface.
Voyager 1 & voyager 2
All of the eight planets have been visited or orbited by space probes.
Space-probes have ; see related link below .
April 2008 At present the only planet in our solar system that has not been visited (either by an orbiting spacecraft or flyby spacecraft) has been the recently planet downgraded body of Pluto. There is a mission currently in motion to visit this distant outpost.
space probes have crossed Pluto's orbit, but never have visited the planet because Pluto was not in alignment with the flight path of the space probes.
No. Space junk consists of fragments of spacecraft left in space. Saturn is a planet.
All of the eight planets have been visited or orbited by space probes.
Space-probes have ; see related link below .
April 2008 At present the only planet in our solar system that has not been visited (either by an orbiting spacecraft or flyby spacecraft) has been the recently planet downgraded body of Pluto. There is a mission currently in motion to visit this distant outpost.
voyager 2 is the only spacecraft that visited Uranus by a third grader
No space probes have visited earth as all space probes have originated on earth and therefore cannot 'visit' because earth is it's home.
Unmanned - Space probes are a form of robotic spacecraft.
No manned missions have gone farther away than the moon. If you mean space probes or satellites, I think three
space probes have crossed Pluto's orbit, but never have visited the planet because Pluto was not in alignment with the flight path of the space probes.
A space probe is an unmanned spacecraft sent into space.
space probes
The term "space probe" is normally limited to unmanned (robotic) spacecraft. So, no, space probes do not have people aboard them.
No. Space junk consists of fragments of spacecraft left in space. Saturn is a planet.