The Mercury Messenger is an orbiting space probe observing the planet Mercury. We generally reserve the word "rover" for a tracked or wheeled vehicle which moves around on the surface, and we haven't tried to do that yet.
The Messenger spacecraft is a robotic probe sent to Mercury. There are no living things aboard, certainly not people. No human beings have gone farther than about 300 miles into space for the past 40 years. (That's like 1/2 the distance from New York to Chicago, and like 0.1 percent of the distance to the moon.)
yes he also flew the spacecraft to the moon. but he didn't invent the mars rover. Clint is fine as hell
The term "space probe" is normally limited to unmanned (robotic) spacecraft. So, no, space probes do not have people aboard them.
Yes Neil Armstrong was on both the Gemini spacecraft as well as the Apollo 11 spacecraft.
The spacecraft's name is Serenity.
A probe is a spacecraft designed to explore and gather information about a celestial body, typically by orbiting it or flying by it. A satellite is an object that orbits a larger body, such as a planet or a moon. A rover is a vehicle that is designed to move on the surface of a celestial body to explore it up close.
The First spacecraft was the MESSENGER. The First spacecraft was the MESSENGER.
the spacecraft is the MESSENGER i the spacecraft is the MESSENGER i
rover
The first pictures were taken by NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft in 2011.http://www.space.com/11952-latest-photos-mercury-nasa-messenger-probe-part2.html
The space probe that has taken detailed photos of Mercury is the MESSENGER (MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging) spacecraft. It orbited Mercury from 2011 to 2015 and provided valuable insights into the planet's surface and composition.
a space craft
No, as of 2017, nothing sent from Earth has ever landed on Pluto. The New Horizons spacecraft did a flyby observation (2015-2016) but did not land.
The probe "Mars Science Laboratory" (MSL) and its rover, Curiosity, were launched on November 26, 2011 and were scheduled to arrive at Mars in August, 2012.
The "Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter" was sent to Mars in August 2005, arriving there in 2006. The probe "Mars Science Laboratory" and its rover, Curiosity, were launched on November 26, 2011 and were scheduled to arrive at Mars in August, 2012.
C'mon over, Red Rover! This spacecraft will carry the next Mars rover.
A space probe is an unmanned spacecraft. It is designed to explore space and collect data without the need for human crew on board.