1995 to 2003.
No spaceship has landed on Jupiter. It is not possible as it is a gas planet. Apart from fly- past spacecraft, only Galileo has orbited it in 1975. It released a probe into Jupiter's atmosphere which was crushed and probably vaporized.
Pluto was the only planet not visited by a space mariner space probe.
The space probe that crashed into Jupiter in 2003 was called Galileo. It orbited Jupiter for almost eight years and provided valuable data and images of the planet and its moons before its mission ended with a controlled impact into Jupiter's atmosphere.
Jupiter (Voyager 1 & 2)Saturn (Voyager 1 & 2)Uranus (Voyager 2)Neptune (Voyager 2)See related link for a full description of the Voyager exploration
Galileo was considered a space probe during its journey to Jupiter because it was actively collecting data and transmitting information back to Earth. Once it arrived in orbit around Jupiter, it transitioned to being a satellite, where it continued to gather data and transmit information, but now it revolved around the planet instead of actively traveling through space.
No, Galileo has been the only probe to actually orbit Jupiter.
The Space Probe Galileo was put into orbit around the planet Jupiter
The Galileo probe flew by Venus in 1990 on its way to Jupiter. It used the gravitational pull of Venus to adjust its trajectory for the journey to Jupiter, where it arrived in 1995 to study the planet and its moons.
The only probe that visited Jupiter and stayed for any length of time was the Galileo probe. Launch from Earth in 1989, it arrived at Jupiter in 1995, and orbited Jupiter and its moon until Sept. 2003, when,due to the deterioration of the orbiter, NASA crashed it into Jupiter's atmosphere. Both Voyagers and Cassini/Huyguens did fly-bys of the planet without going into orbit.
No spaceship has landed on Jupiter. It is not possible as it is a gas planet. Apart from fly- past spacecraft, only Galileo has orbited it in 1975. It released a probe into Jupiter's atmosphere which was crushed and probably vaporized.
Yes, the Galileo spacecraft sent a probe down into the atmosphere of Jupiter in 1995.
No, Galileo was an unmanned probe. At this time, it is not possible for humans to travel to Jupiter.
No, Galileo was an unmanned spacecraft that was launched by NASA in 1989 to study the planet Jupiter and its moons. It did not carry any astronauts on board.
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.
Pluto was the only planet not visited by a space mariner space probe.
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.
Jupiters is a gas planet so there is no chance of landing on it. Several probes have been sent to Jupiter though, including Galileo which orbited it for a while and launched a probe into the planet (which was eventually destroyed). The Galileo vehicle eventually suffered the same fate.