voyager 1 and 2.... they have sent more although i am a lil fuzzy on the names... there was 1 that has been presumed dead... voager 1 and 2 are still commuicating till this day... and will be until 2020
Most Space Probes never come back, the Space Probe Voyager 1 has traveled so far that it is out of our solar system. It was launched in the 1970s.
A space probe is what scientist mainly rely on to gather new information about the solar system
the same as they do on earth!
Satelites in space are used for examining the solar system.There are cameras in the satelites.The satelites can take pictures and we can observe what is in the solar system.Space probes are used for the same thing.Nasa puts space probes onto some planets and see what is on it. I Hope this helps :) no, a satellite is controlled from the earth to signal the satellite in space
Nope. Only in our dreams. And in the movies..... The farthest-traveled objects are the Voyager probes which are not properly out of our own solar system yet. (There is some discussion about where our solar system ends and deep space begins, but if the Voyager probes are beyond it, they are only JUST BARELY beyond it.)
There is no active galaxy that is effective in the intergalactic space probes. No space probe has ever traveled as far as the next nearest star outside of our solar system.
Without space probes, the only knowledge we have of the solar system comes from ground-based telescopes. That's how we did it for 300 years before satellites.
Most Space Probes never come back, the Space Probe Voyager 1 has traveled so far that it is out of our solar system. It was launched in the 1970s.
A space probe is what scientist mainly rely on to gather new information about the solar system
The Voyager 2 went to Neptune on it's last stop in the solar system.
Satellite/s, space probes, telescopes and many other ways.
NASA, the United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration, builds and launches many of the space probes with the cameras.
the same as they do on earth!
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2. There is a matter of some debate as to whether the two Voyager probes have actually left the solar system, an where the "edge" of the solar system actually is. Both are beyond the orbit of Pluto, but have not passed beyond the vaguely-defined Kuiper Belt, and the two probes are just approaching the heliopause, the boundary layer between the solar wind and the broader currents of interstellar space. But it seems likely that however that boundary is defined, the two Voyager probes either were or will be the first man-made objects to pass it.
Far more expensive and far less productive.
usually not, but most stars are just probes or other manmade machinery put up into space
There is much space debris. Humans have many decayed satellites and probes floating around.