No. Up to the present time (early-to-mid-2014), all successful satellite
launch procedures have originated from the Earth's surface.
(Plus perhaps the six Apollo launches from the lunar surface, which were
actually navigated to rendezvous with the orbiting Command Module, and
not to become satellites of anything.)
Yes, Saturn has numerous natural satellites (moons) orbiting around it. Additionally, the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft was a probe sent by NASA and ESA to study Saturn and its moons. While it wasn't a robot in the traditional sense, it was a robotic spacecraft exploring the Saturn system.
does saturn have satellites or robots
Yes, robots have not landed on Saturn itself, but the Cassini spacecraft spent over 13 years studying the planet and its moons before intentionally plunging into Saturn's atmosphere in 2017. No satellites have landed on Saturn.
no i can not that is why i am asking you.
As of March 2011, there are 53 known natural satellites of Saturn.
Saturn
The Cassini-Huygens mission reached Saturn in 2004
Saturn has not been found to have any asteroids in orbit around it. Instead, Saturn is known for its numerous moons, with the current count being 82 natural satellites.
yes
No they mostly looked at Mars.
A natural satellite is a moon. Saturn has sixty-two known moons, fifty-three of which actually have official names. There are hundreds of smaller objects that make up Saturn's rings. Saturn's moon Titan is larger than the planet Mercury, and is the second largest moon in the solar system.
Since we live ON the Earth, all satellites WE have sent have been sent FROM the Earth, and circle around it.