Want this question answered?
No. We got our first close-up look at Pluto when the New Horizons spacecraft made a flyby on July 14, 2015. It passed within 12,500 km of the Pluto-Charon system but could not orbit or land. The very high speed of the spacecraft got it to Pluto in "only" 9 years but with no way to slow down once it got there.
They look at the elements of the landmass.
Galileo plunged into Jupiter's crushing atmosphere on Sept. 21, 2003. The spacecraft was deliberately destroyed to protect one of its own discoveries - a possible ocean beneath the icy crust of the moon Europa. Galileo changed the way we look at our solar system. The spacecraft was the first to fly past an asteroid and the first to discover a moon of an asteroid. It provided the only direct observations of a comet colliding with a planet. Galileo was the first to measure Jupiter's atmosphere with a descent probe and the first to conduct long-term observations of the Jovian system from orbit. It found evidence of subsurface saltwater on Europa, Ganymede and Callisto and revealed the intensity of volcanic activity on Io. see related link
To look at things close up
a lens magnifies an object by using the pupal of your eyes and the glass from the lens to look up close. a lens magnifies an object by using the pupal of your eyes and the glass from the lens to look up close.
The first persons to look closely at the moon were Frank Borman, James Lovell, and William Anders, in their Apollo 8 spacecraft. It was the first test of the Saturn 5 rocket. It also was a test if man could reach the moon, orbit it and then return to earth. It was around Christmas day.
One degree off course is sufficient enough to get a close look of the moon.
good
nothing just people
Spacecraft virus looks like the Lunar Lander used in the Apollo Missions. Viruses of this type are called phages. The typical "Spacecraft virus" that you see illustrated in textbooks is typically a T4 Bacteriophage, also called "Enterobacteria Phage T4"
look at every three leters and put together alyjiehds
No. We got our first close-up look at Pluto when the New Horizons spacecraft made a flyby on July 14, 2015. It passed within 12,500 km of the Pluto-Charon system but could not orbit or land. The very high speed of the spacecraft got it to Pluto in "only" 9 years but with no way to slow down once it got there.
Spacecraft virus looks like the Lunar Lander used in the Apollo Missions. Viruses of this type are called phages. The typical "Spacecraft virus" that you see illustrated in textbooks is typically a T4 Bacteriophage, also called "Enterobacteria Phage T4"
They look at the elements of the landmass.
Up close wolves look like dogs
There are no known and proven alien spacecraft crashes in the last 20 years. Call them "alien spacecraft" because "UFO" just means "something seen in the sky that you don't know what it was". There are also no known and proven alien spacecraft crashes prior to 20 years ago. In fact, so far, we are the only known form of intelligent life in the universe. Somebody has to be first and it is beginning to look as if it is us.
It provided a first line of defense and a great look out area to see approaching enemy soldiers. It also provided safety from incoming weapons as they couldn't clear the height of the wall