Voyager 2
yes, there was a known satellite sent to uranus named Voyager 2 from USA. It encountered more information about Uranus.
No, NASA has not sent a satellite specifically to Uranus. However, the Voyager 2 spacecraft conducted a flyby of Uranus in 1986, providing the most detailed data on the planet to date. There are no current plans for a dedicated mission to Uranus.
As of now, no spacecraft or satellites have been sent to Uranus. However, there have been missions that have conducted flybys of Uranus, such as Voyager 2 which passed by the planet in 1986, providing valuable data and images. There is a proposed mission called Uranus Pathfinder that aims to send a dedicated orbiter to Uranus in the future, but no specific year has been set yet.
NASA sent the Hubble to low earth orbit (320 miles), the crew that sent it there was Commander Loren J. Shriver, Pilot Charles F. Bolden, Jr., Mission SpecialistsSteven A. Hawley, Bruce McCandless II and Kathryn D. Sullivan on the STS-31 mission.
The mission of the Enterprise was to retrieve information and pictures of Mars by landing on the planet and collecting results it then sent back to Earth.
1 has been sent to Uranus. That was the "Voyager 2" spacecraft. Strictly speaking, it wasn't a "satellite" because it did not go into orbit around Uranus.
So var, the only spacecraft to visit the planet Uranus was the Voyager 2 mission. It made a fairly close pass by Uranus on January 24, 2986.
by a telescope Until recently, the only way scientists have been able to study comets is by telescope. However, the ESA's recent Rosetta mission finally reached the destination of its decade-long journey and is currently orbiting a comet. It has even sent out a small lander that has landed on the surface! This mission has advanced our understanding of comets by leaps and bounds.
Jonah went to Nineveh when he was sent on a mission to preach there.
There haven't been any specific space probes sent to Neptune for a Neptunian mission, like Cassini for Saturn and Galileo for Jupiter. However, the Voyager 2 space probe passed by Neptune in 1989 on its way out of the solar system and sent back pictures and information showing it to be an odd planet indeed.The Voyager Interstellar Mission, controlled by the Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, CA, is still in contact with both Voyager spacecraft via the Deep Space Network, a huge array of globally interlinked radio telescopes that use their combined capability to communicate with them.Voyager 1 and 2 were originally programmed to visit Saturn and Jupiter, but Voyager 2's trajectory was altered to visit Neptune and Uranus also, and remains the only spacecraft to have visited either planet. (Voyager 1 was flown past Saturn's moon Titan instead.)
The telescope sent into space to capture sharper and clearer images of planets, stars, and deep space is called the Hubble Space Telescope.
It would take about 9 years for a spacecraft to reach Uranus using current technology, such as the Voyager or New Horizons spacecraft. However, there are no current plans for a mission to Uranus, so it may be longer before another spacecraft is sent to explore the planet.