Space probes leave Earth, they do not go toit.
Yes. Earth will be gone because the sun expands. and when the sun expand the heat in the sun will disintegrate earth by its powerful heat source
546,789,654 Feet
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all life on earth would die because all the water would be gone
yes but it will be in billions and billions years and we will be long gone then
You cant land on a gas giant But probes have gone "inside" gas giants
Semi-autonomous space probes have gone to the vicinity of Neptune, but no robots in the popular sense.
No manned missions have gone farther away than the moon. If you mean space probes or satellites, I think three
No manned missions have gone farther away than the moon. If you mean space probes or satellites, I think three
how many times has tom peake been to Space
No. We have sent probes to Jupiter, which have studied Jupiter and its moons, but nothing has landed on it. No human has gone farther than Earth's moon.
the United States has sent 10 probes to Jupiter, (1) Pioneer 10, (2) Pioneer-Saturn, (3) Voyager 1, (4) Voyager 2, (5) Ulysses, and (6) Galileo.
Getting there! We're stuck on this planet called Earth. Everything we know, we know from being here on Earth, or from the robot probes that we have launched to some of the nearby planets. No astronomer has ever gone into space. When we can actually get out away from the nest and start exploring the universe around us, we may begin to have a hope of learning about the place.
A spacecraft called New Horizons is currently heading towards Pluto and will fly by the planet and its moons in 2015. the voyager probes have gone out past Pluto's orbit.
No. Space shuttles do not have the capability to travel so far. They are designed for low earth orbit.
No space shuttle has ever gone to Jupiter. The shuttle was only ever designed to bring stuff from Earth into orbit, and sometimes back again.
It is due to pass Pluto on the 14th of July 2015 and its name is New Horizons.