See related link for a full description of the Voyager exploration
Voyager 1 flew by Jupiter and Saturn and took the first close pictures, and is now in interstellar space, the most distant probe sent from Earth. Voyager 2 also inspected Jupiter, Saturn, and is the only probe so far to have visited Uranus and Neptune.
Voyager 1 flew by Jupiter and Saturn, While the Voyager 2 probe visited all four gas giant planets; Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Voyager 1 flew by Jupiter and Saturn, While the Voyager 2 probe visited all four gas giant planets; Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Voyager 1 flew past Jupiter and Saturn, photographing each of them, whilst Voyager 2 sent unmanned space probes to Uranus and Neptune.
It was Jupiter and Saturn (gas planets)
Jupiter and Saturn (the gas giants)
Saturn, jupiter, and urnas, nepteru.
There is no Planet X, so no, it did not.
Saturn
All four outer planets. Voyager 1 flew by Jupiter and Saturn only, and Voyager 2 flew by Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Pluto, which is no longer considered to be a planet, was not included in the fly-by.
The Voyager program was designed to study Jupiter and Saturn but was extended to study Uranus, Neptune, and the outer reaches of the solar system. The planetary alignment that allowed Voyager 2 to visit four planets was an opportunity that would not recur for 175 years.
Voyager 1 was launched on the 5th of September 1977 and Voyager 2 was launched before voyager 1 on the 20th of August 1977.
Jupiter
Jupiter
Jupiter voyager 1 used jupiters gravity to send it on to Saturn. voyager 2 went to Saturn uranus and neptune
Voyager 1
Voyager 1 never visited Neptune. Voyager 2 has. Voyager 2 is currently the only scientific instrument to do a fly-by of Neptune.
Voyager 1 was made on earth - it didn't go to Mercury, Venus, Mars, Uranus or Neptune.Voyager 2 didn't got to Mercury, Venus, or Mars.
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 2 was sent out first to allow it to take full advantage of an unusually convenient alignment of the planets allowing it to visit Uranus and Neptune as wellVoyager 1 was launched after voyager 2, but on a faster trajectory which allowed it to reach Jupiter and Saturn before voyager 2.
Voyager II was the first spaceship to visit Neptune on August 25, 1989.
There is no Planet X, so no, it did not.
No.... You cant land on saturn....it's a gas planet... both voyager 1 and voyager 2 went past it though
Voyager 1