No, it was turned back the following year after the land battle of Plataia.
No. After a land battle at Plataia and a sea-land battle at Mycale the following year.
Greece. There were two Persian Wars. The First Persian War in 490 BC had only one major battle (Marathon). The Second Persian War in 480-479 BC had three major battles (Thermopylae, Salamis, Plataea). Salamis was a sea battle. The sites can be found on a map of ancient Greece, and possibly even on a map of modern Greece.
It ended the following year after the land battle of Plataia and amphibious battle of Mycale.
The Greek city-states assembled their armies at Plataia the following year (479 BCE) and defeated the Persian army and its Greek allies. Simultaneously the Greek fleet wiped out the remaining Persian fleet holed up at Mykale in Asia minor. That was the end of the invasion.
The Battle of Salamis was brought on by the Greeks in order to end the Persian amphibious threat to the Greek city-states. This threat made the cities keep their armies at home in self defence. The defeat of the Persian navy at Salamis ended that threat, and the cities were then able to send out their armies to unite and defeat the Persian army at Plataea, ending the Persian invasion.
It helped end the Persian invasion, together with Salamis and Mycale. However the Persian War went on for another 30 years. And the Persians regained the territory it lost later as the Greeks paralysed themselves fighting each other, Persia took back control of its territories in Asia Minor.
After destroying Persian sea power at the battle of Salamis, they were able to defeat their army, and so end the attempt by the Persians to incorporate the cities of mainland Greece into the Persian Empire.
It was the turning point of the Second Persian War; the beginning of the end. After destroying the 300 Spartans at Thermopylae and burning Athens which had been abandoned rather than defended, the Persian Empire seemed unbeatable. At Salamis the Persian Navy was soundly defeated, and the went home. Xerxes also went home, leaving the Persian Army in Greece. They were defeated in the next year at the Battle of Plataea, and then they too went home. The Persians continued to meddle in Greek affairs afterward, and they sided with Sparta against Athens in the Peloponnesian War, but they never again attempted an invasion of Greece after their defeat at Salamis.
False. Yes/No questions are bad ones as you often don't learn anything from them, and they often give you the wrong result. Tell your teacher that. The real answer is: Whilst the Salamis battle was pivotal in ending Persian dominance in Greece, it took two more battles the following year to destroy the Persian forces - Platia and Mykale. Unless they had won those battles, the Greeks would have lost overall.
It ended the following year after the land battle of Plataia and amphibious battle of Mycale.
After destroying Persian sea power at the battle of Salamis, they were able to defeat their army, and so end the attempt by the Persians to incorporate the cities of mainland Greece into the Persian Empire.
The successful battle of Salamis in 480 BCE during the Persian War 499-449 BCE gave the Greek cities control of the sea, and this so weakened the Persian land forces that the Greeks were able to defeat them the following year at Plataia, and so turn bak the Persian invasion.