The only images of the surface of Venus were taken by the Soviet Venera probes, the ones built to survive the intense heat and pressure. The atmospheric pressure is equal to sitting a kilometer under the surface of the ocean, and the temperature is like an incinerator (700-800 degrees). Also, the atmosphere is corrosive: the clouds are composed mainly of sulfuric acid.
The NASA probes on the Venus Express mission also penetrated the atmosphere but did not provide any images. The Venus Express orbiter, as well as the Magellanorbiter, provided detailed radar images of the planet.
The Uranyl-5 Space Probe, from Czechoslovania, on the 10th of November, 1966.
There was a little dog on board that spacecraft named "Hloupý Pes."
Unfortunately, by 1973, the Czech scientists could no longer hear her "yipping" and assumed that she had died.
Magellan
Viking
Venus Express
Various probes of the Mariner series (USA)
Various probes of the Venera series (USSR)
To name a few
voyagers 1 and two
voyager 2
Voyager 2.
Voyager 2 :) Continue your homework
As of now, no spacecraft or satellites have been sent to Uranus. However, there have been missions that have conducted flybys of Uranus, such as Voyager 2 which passed by the planet in 1986, providing valuable data and images. There is a proposed mission called Uranus Pathfinder that aims to send a dedicated orbiter to Uranus in the future, but no specific year has been set yet.
Since Uranus is a gas planet, it doesn't have a solid surface like Earth. The top layer of gas is far from quiet. By studying the pictures sent back by the Voyager spacecraft, scientists were able to see that there are winds blowing at over 645 kilometers. an hour, apart from that, it does not have any physical features.
weird
Miranda is not a space probe sent from Earth, it is a natural satellite of Uranus, i.e. a moon. The probe we sent to Uranus was Voyager 2, which visited in 1986. The confusion stems from our casual use of the word 'satellite'. Strictly, it means an object which orbits another, so the Moon is Earth's natural satellite, and we have put up many artificial satellites, such as those which study the weather and transmit television programmes. We have also sent spacecraft to become satellites of other bodies, such as the Mars Orbiter. If the craft has a different objective we usually call it a space probe.
Voyager 2 :) Continue your homework
Landsat.
yes, there was a known satellite sent to uranus named Voyager 2 from USA. It encountered more information about Uranus.
It was never possible until spacecraft were successfully launched, navigated around the moon, captured images while they were on the far side, and sent the images back to earth when they emerged from behind. That never happened until about 50 years ago. The images seen then were new to human eyes.
1 has been sent to Uranus. That was the "Voyager 2" spacecraft. Strictly speaking, it wasn't a "satellite" because it did not go into orbit around Uranus.
To date, only one has reached Neptune so far. Voyager 2 did a flyby of Neptune in August 1989, sending images and data back to Earth.
As of now, no spacecraft or satellites have been sent to Uranus. However, there have been missions that have conducted flybys of Uranus, such as Voyager 2 which passed by the planet in 1986, providing valuable data and images. There is a proposed mission called Uranus Pathfinder that aims to send a dedicated orbiter to Uranus in the future, but no specific year has been set yet.
Since Uranus is a gas planet, it doesn't have a solid surface like Earth. The top layer of gas is far from quiet. By studying the pictures sent back by the Voyager spacecraft, scientists were able to see that there are winds blowing at over 645 kilometers. an hour, apart from that, it does not have any physical features.
weird
scientists have also found rings around Uranus. Voyager 2 sent back pics of 11 rings. unlike the rings of Saturn, Uranus rings are dark and are made of boulder-sized materials.
A satellite.
No, the furthest we've gone is the moon, but we have sent a probe there called voyager 2, which sent back images of the planet and some of it's moons.