Hundreds of them. Possibly even thousands.
NASA is not crashing to satellites into the moon. Rather, They send two "observation satellites" to the moon and crashed a army grade missile into the moon at the south pole of the moon to find out if there was water/ice under the surface of the moon. The 2 satellites were there to observe what particles flew away from the moon after the explosion of the missile.
There are hundreds of thousands pieces of man-made material currently in orbit. A few thousand of them are actual useful satellites, things that we want to have up there; stuff like GPS satellites, communications satellites, weather observation stations, the International Space Station, and of course, DirecTV satellites. Most of them are "space junk"; satellites that have failed, or broken, or out of fuel. Old booster rocket engines. Collision debris, from when the Chinese shot down a satellite and smashed it into 100,000 pieces of litter in orbit, or when one of the Iridium satellites crashed into a Russian reconnaissance bird.
Depends, if i crashed into you, you can but if you crashed into me you cant, if we both crashed into each other, i guess you can with evidence.
Here is a sentence with the word crashed: The NASCAR drivers crashed during a practice run.
it means the server crashed
The five major types of artificial satellites are: research, communications, weather, navigational, and applications. Please see the related links.
There are no known satellites of Mercury.
We do not know if it crashed or where it crashed.
The spaceship that crashed is called the "Enterprise."
Mercury has no satellites.
Communication satellites orbit around the Earth.Communication satellites orbit around the Earth.Communication satellites orbit around the Earth.Communication satellites orbit around the Earth.
There have been six manned moon landings -Apollo 11 landed 20 July 1969Apollo 12 landed 19 November 1969Apollo 14 landed 5 February 1971Apollo 15 landed 30 July 1971Apollo 16 landed 20 April 1972Apollo 17 landed 11 December 1972There have been numerous unmanned moon landings, 13 soft landings are listed as well as 26 crash landings. Crash landings listed include retired satellites and orbiters, impactors, as well as failed soft landings.USSR probesLuna 2 crashed 13 September 1959Luna 5 crashed 12 May 1965Luna 7 crashed 7 October 1965Luna 8 crashed 6 December 1965Luna 9 landed 3 February 1966Luna 13 landed 24 December 1966Luna 15 crashed 21 July 1969Luna 16 landed 20 September 1970Luna 17 landed 17 November 1970Luna 18 crashed 11 September 1971Luna 20 landed 21 February 1972Luna 21 landed 15 January 1973Luna 23 landed 6 November 1974Luna 24 landed 18 August 1976NASA / US probesRanger 4 crashed 26 April 1962Ranger 6 crashed 2 February 1964Ranger 7 crashed 31 July 1964Ranger 8 crashed 20 February 1965Ranger 9 crashed 24 March 1965Surveyor 1 landed 2 June 1966Surveyor 2 crashed 23 September 1966Surveyor 3 landed 20 April 1967Surveyor 4 crashed (or possibly exploded just above surface) 17 July 1967Surveyor 5 landed 11 September 1967Surveyor 6 landed 10 November 1967Surveyor 7 landed 10 January 1968Lunar Orbiter 1 crashed 29 October 1966Lunar Orbiter 2 crashed 11 October 1967Lunar Orbiter 3 crashed 9 October 1967Lunar Orbiter 4 crashed 31 October 1967Lunar Orbiter 5 crashed 31 January 1968Lunar Prospector crashed 31 July 1999LCROSS crashed 9 October 2009Other Space Agency ProbesHiten (Japan) crashed 10 April 1993SMART 1 (ESA) crashed 3 September 2006MIP (India) crashed 14 November 2008Okina (Japan) crashed 12 February 2009Chang'e 1 (China) crashed 1 March 2009Kaguya (Japan) crashed 10 June 2009