i reallt know what the answer is but i wish i knew and my mood is geeky.
There's only one probe. That's "New Horizons" and it doesn't get to Pluto until year 2015. It was launched in 2006.
The current mission or probe on it's way to Pluto is the New Horizon space craft. The probe was launched on the 19th of January 2006 and is planned to flyby Pluto (meaning it wont land, just flyby the celestial body and take as many pictures as possible) on the 14th of July 2015.
Mars is to unsafe for humans to travel on. Because of all of the sand storms.
When you travel around the Sun or a planet, due to gravitational attraction, it is called an "orbit". It is also a "revolution" around the Sun or planet.
The asteroids that travel before and behind the planet Jupiter are called the Trojan asteroids
There is much space debris. Humans have many decayed satellites and probes floating around.
Air is on mars' surface so sound can travel. Many landers/probes have landed with a microphone, and you can listen to it online.
they lunches off with a rocket first then orbits a planet. Then shoots off on to the planet. after witch, the rocket blows apart back to earth.
Depends on what you want to do when you get there. Interplanetary probes make the journey in about a day. The Apollo lunar landing missions took about 3 days the travel the same distance.
Yes, NASA has sent a couple of unmanned probes to examine Mercury, Mariner 10 which did a flyby and the MESSENGER orbiter.
The Earth.
Manned space travel to Titan is not yet feasible, but probes have been there already.
My answer is that space probes go 5,075 mph, when launched from Earth. Hope I helped you find your answer.
They are placed on top of a rocket, which accelerates them until they "escape" the atmosphere and enter space. Satellites are spacecraft that orbit the Earth or a planet, while those that travel through space are usually called "space probes."
Space probes are not piloted. Probes are launched to places that are months or years away in travel time. A pilot would require too much food, air, and water.
Yes there are some missions you might have to travel on
Each planet stays in it own orbit or path as it circles the sun. The orbits are very very very far apart. the planets never move out of their orbits so they never crash into each other. space probes that go from earth to Venus and Mars our closet neighbor planets have to travel for several months. space probes that go to the farther planets have to travel for years. :) Answer from my first book about space, a question and answer book.<3
I'd say they call Earth the "Jewel Planet" because it's the only planet that can support life as we know, but we are beginning to know more as our space probes travel further and the thing about the only inhabitable planet being Earth could be totally wrong!
no rocket only been to the moon but probes e.g mars rover or sojouney