It is our history, sailing out in space to find an alien and say "honey we're home"
Yes, Voyager II has. (Voyager II is an unmanned space probe).
Voyager I and Voyager II although they were not planned to.
Voyager 1 was launched on September 5, 1977, and Voyager 2 was launched on August 20, 1977.
Two of the US space probes are Voyager I and Voyager 2. NASA launched Voyager I on September 5, 1977. Voyager II ended up being launched before Voyager I on August 20, 1977.
voyager I is one voyager II is another one
The Voyager probes were deep space probes, sent to scout out the outer planets and deep space, so they never really "landed" on any of the planets although voyager I was sent first voyager II overtook it and encountered Saturn on august 1981.
yes. voyager II in 1977. hope it helped:)
Voyager II is the first successful space probe that reached the outer planets or Jovian Planets. It is in the rule of probes that they should not reach the outer planets because it is too far and their probes might malfunction. But this Voyager II probe had a successful flight to the outer planets.
No man-made devices have landed on Uranus. The Voyager probes (I & II) both got close - but the moon Titan was considered more important than a surface landing on Uranus. Voyager I traveled to Titan, While Voyager II continued on into outer space.
Voyager I & II
No space probes have visited Uranus to date. The only spacecraft that has conducted a close flyby of Uranus was NASA's Voyager 2 probe in 1986. There are proposed missions in development that aim to send probes to Uranus in the future.
Just one from us. Voyager II sailed by Uranus in 1986, taking pictures of that planet and its moons.