Titan is a moon that orbits Saturn and is 790,100,000 miles from Earth. The time it would take to travel to Titan would vary based on the speed you were traveling. The last probe sent there by NASA left Earth on October 15, 1997 and did not land on Titan till January 14, 2005 or a total of 2649 days.
About 6-9 years.
10 hours and 39 minutes
15.95 days
Yes: The spacecraft (Cassini--Huygens) was sent to Titan and the probe Huygens landed on Titan on January 14, 2005
aproximately about 2 yreas
The answer is Voyager 2. It reached Uranus in 1986. Last edited by [Phillip Yifei Zhong] The hubble space telecope also sent many photos of Uranus to Earth, It's just that The Voyager II is older. ~Note: [Thank you for writing the top part.] From The Editors of WikiAnswers. ~Note: Thanks for answering this dood - Random Stranger (lol)
Cannot rust. No oxygen or water.
With our current spacecraft technology, getting a small probe out to the Kuiper Belt to visit a dwarf planet such as Haumea would take at least ten years. As technology improves spacecraft will get faster and more efficient, decreasing travel time, but until then it would take quite a long time.
the two spacecraft memorials are Gemini and Titan ll booster
Yes: The spacecraft (Cassini--Huygens) was sent to Titan and the probe Huygens landed on Titan on January 14, 2005
Titan (January 14, 2005)
2 days.
It would take nine months.
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The spacecraft you are trying to think of is Cassini-Huygens. It was carrying the Huygens space probe to the Saturn's moon of Titan.
The answer is Voyager 2. It reached Uranus in 1986. Last edited by [Phillip Yifei Zhong] The hubble space telecope also sent many photos of Uranus to Earth, It's just that The Voyager II is older. ~Note: [Thank you for writing the top part.] From The Editors of WikiAnswers. ~Note: Thanks for answering this dood - Random Stranger (lol)
aproximately about 2 yreas
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22.2 minutes