yes
By sending a probe to other planets we get amazing pictures how what they look like close up. Other sensors on the probe can find out about the magnetic field and the surface temperature, and chemicals in the atmosphere, and find out details of the moons and rings of the outer planets.
The gas giants have more moons than the inner rockey planets, since they are a lot more massive and are in a region of space where more moons can be captured.
Yes, the Galileo spacecraft sent a probe down into the atmosphere of Jupiter in 1995.
Craters are formed by impacts from objects from space, such as meteorites.
The mass of the planet creates a force=mg on the probe and f=ma occurs and the probe is accelerated by this force, thus changing its path.
Space does not have an atmosphere. It is generally considered a vacuum. Planets and some moons have atmospheres.
because of your mom
By sending a probe to other planets we get amazing pictures how what they look like close up. Other sensors on the probe can find out about the magnetic field and the surface temperature, and chemicals in the atmosphere, and find out details of the moons and rings of the outer planets.
Planets and moons can be seen because of the light that shines off of them in space.
the u.s space probe clementinelater another space probe confirmed that frozen ice exists on the moon
A space probe is not the same as a satellite, because they can orbit planets and sat elites don't.
Cassini
Basically absence... also comets, meteors, asteroids, planets, moons, satellites, shuttles and space stations, planets and moons.
inside space is planets galaxies moons and black holes
inside space is planets galaxies moons and black holes
Voyager II is the first successful space probe that reached the outer planets or Jovian Planets. It is in the rule of probes that they should not reach the outer planets because it is too far and their probes might malfunction. But this Voyager II probe had a successful flight to the outer planets.
moons, stars, planets, meteoroid's.