yep, it burned up
Yes, NASA's Parker Solar Probe was launched in 2018 and is the closest any spacecraft has ever gone to the Sun, studying its outer atmosphere. The probe's mission is to help scientists better understand the behavior of the Sun's corona and the solar wind.
no there is no point it is to hot remember it the closes planet to the sun they would just melt
Sun Not the Only UnvistedThe sun is a star, but no, it is not the only object in our solar system that we have not yet vsited. There are many planets, too, although we have sent probes that have taken pictures of many of them.
If by humans visiting you mean , Which planet's have had humans land on that planet the answer is none. The only other place in space that humans have visited is the moon.
Probes are used to investigate certain aspects of an environment that is difficult or dangerous for humans to investigate in person. Probes are usually relatively small objects that contain just enough equipment and energy to analyse specified aspects of the environment. In space, we have sent probes out of the solar system and to Mars to name just two. The Voyager I is a probe that we sent out of the solar system. Its distance is now 100 times that of the distance between Earth and the Sun. On Earth, we have sent probes into the deep ocean. In Medicine, we often use probes to identify the cause of medical conditions (and sometimes operate on it. Using a probe means that the doctor can make a tiny cut on the skin instead of opening up the patient which is far more risky.
From the sun solar energy
Yes. Probes have already be sent to the Moon, and other planets; this requires a velocity very near the escape velocity from Earth. Other probes are leaving the Solar System, so they achieved the much higher escape velocity required to escape the attraction from the Sun.
While many space probes near the Sun (or not too far away, like satellites near the Earth) are solar powered, the designers of the Voyager probes knew that the spacecraft would be going out from the solar system to distances where the Sun is merely a bright star. So the Voyager probes use a nuclear thermal power source.
We have been unable to find any sign of life past or present on any of the planets that we have sent probes to. We have not visited any other solar systems besides our own yet. With millions of stars in the universe and each could have as many planets in their orbits as our sun has, there could be life on one or more and we might never find it. We would need spaceships that travel faster than anything yet developed.
No, not with any manned missions. The energy would fry anything that comes close. Perhaps we will be able to send probes to reasonable distances, or to Mercury, to make observations. We currently have probes in our general vacinity that are taking amazingly beautiful and informative 3D images of the sun.
Space probes typically do not visit Earth as they are designed to explore other planets or celestial bodies in space. However, there have been missions like the Parker Solar Probe and the International Sun-Earth Explorer (ISEE-3) that have conducted studies from the vicinity of Earth's orbit.
Humans have sent space probes to take pictures of Mercury from orbit around the planet, but we have not sent a man to Mercury. Sending people to Mercury would be hard because it is so dangerously close to the sun.