well 40 or more its hard to answer but la la la blah blah blah
Venus has no natural satellites but probes have been sent their for many years now.
The probes that have been sent or being planned to be sent to Venus are Voyager2 and that is it there are no other probes being planned to be sent to Venus.
Many have been sent, although only around a third of missions actually got there. However, the number that were sent is around 42, with several planned by various agencies for 2010-2011 and beyond.16 probes have gone to Mars.
absolutly none.no people can survive on venus even in a well protected billion dollar suit.they cant survive because the atmospheric presure on venus is to heavy and if anyone tried to set foot on venus they would be emmeditly crushed by the atmosphere.if you think im playing i promise im not.......................... ACTUALLY (hey new person answering here) The Russians sent a probe to Venus that was able to shoot back a few pictures before falling victim to the heat. In fact look up "Venera 13" and "Venera 14". Each sent back pictures of the surface.
None yet. We have not sent one out of low earth orbit even.
To date there have been 282 manned missions sent into space and more than 1000 unmanned missions.
They are sent on special missions.
there has been 16 probes that had been sent to venus.
Venus has no natural satellites but probes have been sent their for many years now.
The probes that have been sent or being planned to be sent to Venus are Voyager2 and that is it there are no other probes being planned to be sent to Venus.
The Russians have sent missions to Venus and have discovered that it is a most inhospitable place with an atmosphere that is 95% carbon dioxide, and a surface air pressure of 93 atmospheres. Its chronic global warming gives it a surface temperature of 400-500 degrees C.
There is no life as we know it on Venus. The only technology there is what we sent to Venus in the various probes sent from Earth.
to study venus...lol!
yes
Apart from visiting probes sent from Earth, Venus has no natural satellites of its own.
The ancient Babylonians knew Venus was one star but the ancient Greeks thought it was two stars, one in the morning and one at night. Avicenna of Persia observed Venus in transit in 1032. Galileo watched the phases of Venus and knew it as proof that the planets circled around the sun. Russian Michail Lomomosol made discoveries about the atmosphere of Venus. The Soviets sent probes to Venus in 1961, 1966, and 1967. Then the US sent the Mariner Missions. The Russians sent another probe in 1985. NASA sent probes in 2006 and 2007. The Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency The European Space Agency attempted an orbit in 2010 unsuccessfully. The European Space Agency has a mission planned in 2016. Venus still has many secrets.
to study venus...lol!