Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 have both left the heliosphere, but neither has left the solar system. The edge of the solar system is considered to be the outer boundary of the Oort Cloud, The exact width of the Oort Cloud is not known, but its estimated that it would take Voyager 2 about 300 years to reach the inner boundary of it. To reach the outer boundary of the Oort Cloud, truly leaving the solar system, would take Voyager 2 something like 30,000 years.
Some notable space probes and achievements include: Voyager 1 and 2, which have left our solar system and are now in interstellar space. The Mars Curiosity rover, which has been exploring the surface of Mars since 2012. The New Horizons probe, which provided the first close-up images of Pluto and its moons. The Cassini spacecraft, which studied Saturn and its moons for over a decade before plunging into the planet's atmosphere.
If by robotic, you mean unmanned... The Voyager 1 probe has left our solar system - and is approximately 134 AU (2.00×1010 km) - or 20,000,000,000 km from Earth.
Nothing man-made has left our solar system yet. The furthest thing is Voyager 1, which is now about 116AU away from Earth, around 10.8 billion miles - at the edge of our solar system.
No, the Oort Cloud does not have rings. The Oort Cloud is a vast region of space beyond the outer planets in our solar system where comets are believed to originate from. It consists of icy objects and debris left over from the formation of the solar system, but does not have ring structures like those found around planets.
= Answer = None The following spacecraft have passed the last known body, ie Pluto Pioneer 10 and 11 Voyager 1 and 2 New Horizons will leave the solar system after flying past Pluto in July 2015. The solar system does not really end with Pluto. Besides the planets, there is a thin haze of dust (some of it bunched into comets). Any of this dust that is nearer to the Sun than to any other star may be in the gravitational hold of the Sun and so counts as part of the solar system. Voyager 1 is now near the Sun's heliopause [See Link]. The heliopause is the theoretical boundary where the Sun's solar wind is no longer great enough to push back the stellar winds of the surrounding stars. = Answer = It is true that none of the 5 spacecraft have to date left the physical environment of the solar system, however all 5 of them have sufficient kinetic energy to escape the Sun's gravity. Their escape from the solar system is therefore guaranteed, nothing that man or nature can do, short of an asteroid impact, can stop them from leaving the solar system. By having acquired sufficient velocity to exceed solar escape velocity, they can be said to have left the solar system. Even New Horizons, which will not complete its Pluto reconnaissance mission until 2014, has already escaped from the solar system.
Voyager One and Voager Two have both passed beyond the orbit of Pluto.
No satellite has left our solar system. The farthest human-made object from Earth is the Voyager 1 spacecraft, which has entered interstellar space but is still within the boundary of our solar system.
The farthest probe away from Earth is Voyager 1. As of 2011, it hasn't left the solar system, but it will relatively soon. When it does, it will continue sending back data about the parts of outer space that it is in. The craft Voyager two, which not quite as far away as Voyager 1, will do the same thing. The crafts Pioneer 10 and 11 are also headed out of the solar system, but we no longer have radio contact with them, so they will just be objects flying through space.
The Voyager 1 spacecraft is a 722-kilogram (1,592 lb) space probe launched by NASA on September 5, 1977, to study the outer Solar System and eventually interstellar space. Operating for 33 years, 11 months and 12 days as of today (17 August 2011), the spacecraft receives routine commands and transmits data back to the Deep Space Network. It will be the first probe to leave the Solar System and is the farthest man made object from Earth.The two Voyager satellites have left the solar system and passed the "heliopause", the boundary layer between the solar system and deep space.V1 Launch Date: 1977-09-05 12:56:00 UTCV2 Launch Date: 1977-08-20 14:29:00 UTC
No, nobody has ever left the solar system.
Both Voyager 1 and 2 have travelled through the solar system, I believe Voyager 1 is the only one which has left the solar system (or is in the process of).
Yes It's not my solar system.
Some notable space probes and achievements include: Voyager 1 and 2, which have left our solar system and are now in interstellar space. The Mars Curiosity rover, which has been exploring the surface of Mars since 2012. The New Horizons probe, which provided the first close-up images of Pluto and its moons. The Cassini spacecraft, which studied Saturn and its moons for over a decade before plunging into the planet's atmosphere.
The farthest rocket is Voyager 1 who went Interstellar (which means that it left the Solar System) on Sept 12,2013.
If by robotic, you mean unmanned... The Voyager 1 probe has left our solar system - and is approximately 134 AU (2.00×1010 km) - or 20,000,000,000 km from Earth.
We cannot be certain, since we've never sent a probe out that far with the proper equipment to detect anything. We _expect_ to find a vast toroidal volume (doughnut-shaped) of space with some asteroids, a few minor planets, and LOTS of left-over junk from the formation of the solar system.
These are known as interstellar probes, a space probe that has left, or is expected to leave the solar system and enter interstellar space. There are currently five out there; Pioneer 10 (now inactive), Pioneer 11 (inactive), Voyager 1 (functional), Voyager 2 (functional) and New Horizons (functional - currently on its way to Pluto). There are, or have been various other interstellar probes in the pipeline, including; `TAU mission` (a probe designed to reach a thousand astronomical units in 50 years), the `Innovative Interstellar Explorer` and the `Realistic Interstellar Explorer & Interstellar Explorer`.