Jupiter was first.
no
Jupiter
Voyager did not discover any new planets. By the time Voyager was launched we already knew of all the planets in our solar system that we know of today. There were also two Voyager probes, not one. The first planet that either probe studied was Jupiter, which we had known for millennia. Voyager 1 flew by Jupiter in March 1979 while Voyager 2 flew by in July of the same year.
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 did not visit the planet Pluto. Voyager 1's trajectory did not take it close to Pluto, and Voyager 2 was redirected after its Uranus encounter to head out of the solar system in a different direction.
NO. during the summer of 1989, NASA's Voyager 2 was the first spacecraft to see the planet Neptune.
Voyager 2 flew by Saturn in 1981, the second planet visited by the Voyager program after Jupiter. It provided valuable data and images of Saturn, its rings, and its moons, enhancing our understanding of the planet and its system.
sun
As of now, Voyager 2 has not found Planet X. The existence of Planet X, also known as Planet Nine, is still a topic of ongoing research and debate among astronomers. It has not been directly observed or confirmed by any spacecraft like Voyager 2.
Jupiter
Jupiter
Voyager 2
jupiter