No manned missions have gone farther away than the moon.
If you mean space probes or satellites, I think three
A spacecraft didn't visit Jupiter it is just a ball of gas.
A spacecraft didn't visit Jupiter it is just a ball of gas.
No one has visited Jupiter to date, though several probes have been sent.
No, Galileo has been the only probe to actually orbit Jupiter.
yes a space craft has visited jupiter. the voyagers 1&2, pioneer 10&11(p10 in12/3/73), galileo,ulysses, cassini-huygens, and the new horizons. as jupiter is a gas planet none of these flights were landed they were just flybys
No manned missions have gone farther away than the moon. If you mean space probes or satellites, I think three
none
Several spacecraft have visited Jupiter, including the Galileo orbiter, which studied the planet and its moons from 1995 to 2003, and the Juno spacecraft, which has been in orbit since 2016 to study Jupiter's atmosphere and magnetic field. The Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 missions also conducted flybys in 1979, providing significant data and images of the planet and its moons. Additionally, the New Horizons spacecraft made a brief flyby of Jupiter in 2007 on its way to Pluto.
No spacecraft has visited all the planets.
Yes. Jupiter has been visited on flyby missions by the space probes Pioneer 10, Pioneer 11, Voyager 1, Voyager 2, Ulysses, Cassini, and New Horizons. The space probe Galileo orbited Jupiter from 1995 until 2003. Upon arrival, it sent an atmospheric probe into Jupiter's atmosphere.
There are many planets in our solar system that have not been visited by a spacecraft. As of now, the planet Uranus has not been visited by any spacecraft.
Pluto will be visited by the spacecraft New Horizon in 2015