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The three main stages in exploring a planet are: 1. send out a spacecraft that passes one or more bodies in space without orbiting them. 2. study a planet over a long period of time. and finally, 3. land instruments on a planet or to send instruments through its atmosphere.
yes
pluto
No, because Uranus is a gaseous planet, which means it has no surface. Nowhere to land a spacecraft.
NASA's Pathfinder landed on Mars on July 4, 1997.
Not yet. And there never will be a spacecraft landing on Neptune. The reason being, because Neptune is a gas giant, it has no solid surface for a spacecraft to land on. Neptune is also freezing cold. Electronic equipment such as a spacecraft would freeze up and malfunction in its atmosphere and most likely end up being consumed by the exposed molten ammonia core.
Mars. Viking 1 and Viking 2 both landed on the planets surface in 1976.
No, because there is no surface to Jupiter, it is a gaseous planet with nowhere to land a spacecraft. Temperatures and pressure on Jupiter are also very extreme.
The spacecraft uses a lunar module to land on the moon.
a spacecraft is anything from satellites to shuttles.
Jupiter is Gaseous Planet so no Lander/Rover can land on Jupiter. Voyager is basically a Spacecraft and spacecraft is used as flyby around a planet or object. It had a flyby of Jupiter in 1979. It is now outside the heliopause - the "bubble" of plasma coming from the sun otherwise known as solar wind. It is now out in what we consider interstellar space and still transmitting.