Jupiter
Mars was the first one.
Jupiter
Because Cinderella's fairy godmother tolled the probes to go to another planet first.
no
Yes. It was one of the Mariner probes.
Mariner 9
I believe it was Russian probes skirmishing Venus.
The first spacecraft to visit Jupiter was pioneer 10 in 1973, followed a few months later by Pioneer 11. Aside from taking the first close-up pictures of the planet, the probes discovered its magnetosphere and its largely fluid interior. The voyager 1 and Voyager 2 probes visited the planet in 1979, and studied its moon and the ring system, discovering the volcanic activity of Io and the presence of water ice on the surface of Europa. Ulysses further studied Jupiter's magnetosphere in 1992 and then again in 2000. The Cassiniprobe approached the planet in 2000 and took very detailed images of its atmosphere. The New Horizons spacecraft passed by Jupiter in 2007 and made improved measurements of its and its satellites' parameters.
they lunches off with a rocket first then orbits a planet. Then shoots off on to the planet. after witch, the rocket blows apart back to earth.
They are made out of technology and they have cameras to take pictures of the planet. There are 2 types of probes a space probe wicth flys around the planet and takes pictures and planet probes or planet rovers. But they have no people living on the probes.
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.
Voyagers The First Hawaiians - 2009 was released on: USA: 30 May 2009 USA: 30 May 2009 (Hawaii)
The Soviet Union sent several space probes to Venus. The first several probes were crushed by the unexpectedly high atmospheric pressure on Venus, and baked by incredibly hot temperatures. But two of the Venera probes safely landed on Venus, and transmitted pictures back to Earth.