Jupiter has been explored multiple times by multiple space probes, each sent for varying purposes. Some were sent to study the surface, some to study the rings, others to study the magnetic field and so on.
- Pioneer 10. December 3rd 1973.
- Pioneer 11. December 2nd 1974.
- Voyager 1. January 4th to April 13th 1979.
- Voyager 2. April 25th to August 5th 1979.
- Galileo. December 7th 1995 until it malfunctioned on September 22nd 2003.
- Ulysses. February 8th 1992.
- Cassini-Huygens. December 30th 2000.
- New Horizions. January to May 2007. (Was on-route to Pluto, but stopped by Jupiter along the way to study a volcanic anomaly).
Another probe called Juno was launched in August 2011 and will arrive at Jupiter in August 2016.
The spacecraft that have visited Jupiter include Pioneer 10 and 11, Voyager 1 and 2, Galileo, Cassini, and Juno. These missions have provided valuable data and images of Jupiter's atmosphere, moons, and magnetic field.
In real life to date, we have only sent probes past Jupiter. In fiction, perhaps the most famous instances of manned missions to Jupiter are found in the novels of the late Arthur C. Clarke (2001: A Space Odyssey, and their sequels).
There have been no man made robots or landers to land on Pluto yet. A probe called New Horizons is on it's way, it should finally get to Pluto in 2015, but won't land. It will fly by and take pictures.
No,, there have never been, nor will there ever be rovers on Jupiter. Jupiter is a gas planet. It has no surface on which to land. However, a rover might one day land on one of Jupiter's many moons.
Yes, the Galileo probe was sent to study Jupiter. It arrived at Jupiter in 1995 and spent eight years studying the planet, its moons, and its magnetosphere before its mission ended in 2003.
No, nobody has ever been to Jupiter. The only place people have gone is the moon.
They have, except Jupiter is actually made of gas, and if a probe goes too deep into the planet, it will soon evaporate and become part of Jupiter
Yes, the Galileo spacecraft sent a probe down into the atmosphere of Jupiter in 1995.
No, Galileo has been the only probe to actually orbit Jupiter.
No. Nothing can land on Jupiter as it does not have a solid surface. The Galileo spacecraft orbited Jupiter from 1995 until 2002. In 1995 an atmospheric probe with the Galileo mission entered Jupiter's atmosphere to study it. The probe eventually melted as it entered the superheated layers deep in Jupiter's atmosphere. In 2002 the main Galileo space probe burned up in Jupiter's atmosphere at the end of its mission.
jupiter was married
Yes. Jupiter has been visited on flyby missions by the space probes Pioneer 10, Pioneer 11, Voyager 1, Voyager 2, Ulysses, Cassini, and New Horizons. The space probe Galileo orbited Jupiter from 1995 until 2003. Upon arrival, it sent an atmospheric probe into Jupiter's atmosphere.
No one has ever been to Jupiter. The farthest we have made it is the moon.
The spacecraft that have visited Jupiter include Pioneer 10 and 11, Voyager 1 and 2, Galileo, Cassini, and Juno. These missions have provided valuable data and images of Jupiter's atmosphere, moons, and magnetic field.
Cassini
because space probe whant to know more about it.
It was supposed to get to Jupiter on 2016 May 11