Luna 1: The first successful space probe Mariner 9: The first space probe to orbit another planet.
Huygens probe: Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn's moon Titan. Spirit and Opportunity: The Mars Exploration Rovers, Spirit and Opportunity landed on Mars to explore the Martian surface and geology, and searched for clues to past water activity on Mars.
Voyager 1: Visited Jupiter and Saturn and was the first probe to provide detailed images of the moons of these planets. Voyager 2: Identical to Voyager 1, but visited Uranus and Neptune. Pioneer 10: The first spacecraft to travel through the asteroid belt. Pioneer 11: The first to explore Saturn and its main rings.
Voyager 1: it is more than 16 billion km (10 billion miles) away from the earth which is the furtherest from earth anything has gotten
Spirit and Opportunity: Two rovers that landed on Mars to study rocks
Voyager 1 and voyager 2 are the space probes.
one of the space probes are called Thor-Able because it was lanched on Thor booster rockets
non Jupiter is gass
non Jupiter is gass
Binomial nomenclature
Lepomis macrochirus
and Myotis keenii are just a few
The only probe to lan was the Voyager 2.
Unknown
They are made out of technology and they have cameras to take pictures of the planet. There are 2 types of probes a space probe wicth flys around the planet and takes pictures and planet probes or planet rovers. But they have no people living on the probes.
Voyager 1 & 2, Pioneer probes
If this question refers to the Voyager program, the answer is, we don't know yet. Both the program, and the two deep space probes Voyager 1 and 2, are still on-going. Both probes have enough electrical energy that they are estimated to be able to continue operating to about 2020. At this point, the program will most likely close down, but the probes will still continue travel on a ballistic trajectory, and where they will end up is anyones guess.
The two spacecraft that have apparently escaped the Sun's gravity force and have now passed into outer space are the inter-stellar space probes Pioneer 10, launched in 1972 and Voyager 1 launched in 1977.
The Viking program sent two space probes to the planet Mars in 1976. It was a very expensive mission, costing approximately 1 billion dollars.
In the movie roving mars they mentioned two space probes tat they sent out two mars with successful outcomes on the landing the two names were spirit and opportunity
Vega 1 and Vega 2 were the last successful Russian space missions beyond Earth's orbit. These two space probes visited Venus and Halley's Comet in the mid-1980s.
The two most well known ones are Voyager Probe and the Viking probe.
They are made out of technology and they have cameras to take pictures of the planet. There are 2 types of probes a space probe wicth flys around the planet and takes pictures and planet probes or planet rovers. But they have no people living on the probes.
Two of the US space probes are Voyager I and Voyager 2. NASA launched Voyager I on September 5, 1977. Voyager II ended up being launched before Voyager I on August 20, 1977.
The Viking Space Probe was actually two different probes. Viking 1 and Viking 2 were used to explore Mars. The probes took photographs, did experiments and deployed instruments to the surface of Mars.
There have been two space probes: Mariner 10 and Messenger.
There have been two space probes: Mariner 10 and Messenger.
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2. There is a matter of some debate as to whether the two Voyager probes have actually left the solar system, an where the "edge" of the solar system actually is. Both are beyond the orbit of Pluto, but have not passed beyond the vaguely-defined Kuiper Belt, and the two probes are just approaching the heliopause, the boundary layer between the solar wind and the broader currents of interstellar space. But it seems likely that however that boundary is defined, the two Voyager probes either were or will be the first man-made objects to pass it.
Voyager 1 & 2, Pioneer probes
If this question refers to the Voyager program, the answer is, we don't know yet. Both the program, and the two deep space probes Voyager 1 and 2, are still on-going. Both probes have enough electrical energy that they are estimated to be able to continue operating to about 2020. At this point, the program will most likely close down, but the probes will still continue travel on a ballistic trajectory, and where they will end up is anyones guess.
The Soviet Union sent several space probes to Venus. The first several probes were crushed by the unexpectedly high atmospheric pressure on Venus, and baked by incredibly hot temperatures. But two of the Venera probes safely landed on Venus, and transmitted pictures back to Earth.