Yes. The gravitational force of Jupiter was used to accelerate the spacecraft and change it's direction so that it would encounter Saturn. At Saturn the same technique was used to send the spaceraft to Uranus.
Voyager 1 and 2 in 1979
Jupiter voyager 1 used jupiters gravity to send it on to Saturn. voyager 2 went to Saturn uranus and neptune
The Voyager 1 spacecraft discovered Jupiter's ring.
A number of space probes have visited Jupiter, including Pioneer 10 and 11, along with Voyager 1 and 2. Voyager 1 took some very detailed pictures of Jupiters spot in 1979.
According to my dealer, it should be changed at 150,000 km.
every 100,000 miles
Yes. IO has over 400 active volcanoes and it is one of the most geologically active objects in the Solar System. Voyager 1 photographed a volcano erupting on IO.
No. The Voyager spacecraft are barely beyond Pluto's orbit. Neither of the Voyager probes are aimed in the direction of Proxima Centauri, and even if they were they would not arrive for about 175,000 years.
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 did not visit the planet Pluto. Voyager 1's trajectory did not take it close to Pluto, and Voyager 2 was redirected after its Uranus encounter to head out of the solar system in a different direction.
The spring goes to the engine side.
It was built with R12 will need changed to R134a.
Counter clockwise