Why could voyager to fly past Saturn Uranus and Neptune even know it left earth with only enough energy to reach Jupiter
The answer is lands, i had it on a crossword puzzle for a science project. :)
Pioneer 11
The main difference between a flyby spacecraft and an orbiter is the guidance computer programming: which causes a flyby to go by the planet and take pictures and other readings allowed in the limited time of the single pass, while an orbiter is captured into an orbit about the planet where it has a much longer period to take pictures and other readings.
On July 14, 2015, New Horizons flew 12,500 km (7,800 mi) above the surface of Pluto, making it the first spacecraft to explore the dwarf planet.On October 25, 2016, the last of the recorded data from the Pluto flyby was received from New Horizons.Having completed its flyby of Pluto, New Horizons has maneuvered for a flyby of Kuiper belt object (486958) 2014 MU69, expected to take place on January 1, 2019.
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.
flyby A+
As of February 2010, eight robotic probes have made been to Jupiter. Seven visited Jupiter for short periods as they flew by. One remained in orbit around Jupiter for almost eight years. They are: Galileo - 1995-2003 (orbit) Pioneer 10 - 1973 (flyby) Pioneer 11 - 1974 (flyby) Voyager 1 - 1979 (flyby) Voyager 2 - 1979 (flyby) Ulyssess - 1992 (flyby) Cassini - 2000 (flyby) New Horizons - 2007 (flyby)
Luna 1 was the first successful flyby satellite launch to the Moon.
Luna 1 was the first successful flyby satellite launch to the Moon.
Flyby
The answer is lands, i had it on a crossword puzzle for a science project. :)
flyby A+
flypaper flyby
Pioneer 11
A flyby craft
Extremely dangerous
It depends on what kind of spacecraft we're talking about. There's this type of spacecraft called 'Flyby' Spacecraft. Flyby Spacecrafts are those who cannot observe distant objects. They would just flyby planets, asteroids, or whatever, and avoid being caught by a planet's magnetic field, or orbit. Please be more specific :)