Mars. Viking 1 and Viking 2 both landed on the planets surface in 1976.
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.
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.
The presence or absence of spacecraft near Mars will have no effect whatsoever on the planet's gravitational field.
Cassini spacecraft
Jupiter ;)
yes
pluto
No, because Uranus is a gaseous planet, which means it has no surface. Nowhere to land a spacecraft.
that you can see the wonders of hashem and you can be the one to go up and see all the amazing creations
NASA's Pathfinder landed on Mars on July 4, 1997.
NASA's Viking 1 and Viking 2 landed on Mars in 1976.
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.
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.
No spacecraft has visited all the planets.
The spacecraft uses a lunar module to land on the moon.
The First spacecraft was the MESSENGER. The First spacecraft was the MESSENGER.
Venus was the planet that the spacecraft Magellan enabled scientists to research extensively.