no
If their was intelligent life or even life big enough to see anywhere in our solar system we would have found it already.
We found some eviedence in metors that their may be microscopic life on mars, but if it exists it isn't very common, so none of the probes we sent have managed to confirm it yet.
Titan the moon of saturn has all the same chemicals Earth had when life first appeared here, so many scientist want to go their and search for primitive life, but as yet they did not.
Outside our solar system their is almost certainly some aliens, somewhere, but we have yet to find them.
There is a small collection of hardware like the Mars Rover(s) and other Mars landers on the planet, yes - but everything that could be called a "spaceship" that is on Mars came from earth, and was sent by us.
No space probes have visited Uranus to date. The only spacecraft that has conducted a close flyby of Uranus was NASA's Voyager 2 probe in 1986. There are proposed missions in development that aim to send probes to Uranus in the future.
No, there have not been any space missions that have visited Uranus. The Voyager 2 spacecraft is the only spacecraft to have passed by Uranus, conducting a flyby in 1986. There are currently no upcoming missions planned to visit Uranus.
Yes, the Voyager 2 spacecraft made the only close flyby of Uranus in 1986. It discovered 10 new moons and provided the most detailed images to date of the planet and its atmosphere. No robotic landers or rovers have been sent to Uranus so far.
There haven't been any specific space probes sent to Neptune for a Neptunian mission, like Cassini for Saturn and Galileo for Jupiter. However, the Voyager 2 space probe passed by Neptune in 1989 on its way out of the solar system and sent back pictures and information showing it to be an odd planet indeed.The Voyager Interstellar Mission, controlled by the Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, CA, is still in contact with both Voyager spacecraft via the Deep Space Network, a huge array of globally interlinked radio telescopes that use their combined capability to communicate with them.Voyager 1 and 2 were originally programmed to visit Saturn and Jupiter, but Voyager 2's trajectory was altered to visit Neptune and Uranus also, and remains the only spacecraft to have visited either planet. (Voyager 1 was flown past Saturn's moon Titan instead.)
There is a small collection of hardware like the Mars Rover(s) and other Mars landers on the planet, yes - but everything that could be called a "spaceship" that is on Mars came from earth, and was sent by us.
yes, there was a known satellite sent to uranus named Voyager 2 from USA. It encountered more information about Uranus.
I don't think any have, except for "Voyager 2" which flew past in 1986.
No space probes have visited Uranus to date. The only spacecraft that has conducted a close flyby of Uranus was NASA's Voyager 2 probe in 1986. There are proposed missions in development that aim to send probes to Uranus in the future.
no
no there havn't been any
No, there have not been any space missions that have visited Uranus. The Voyager 2 spacecraft is the only spacecraft to have passed by Uranus, conducting a flyby in 1986. There are currently no upcoming missions planned to visit Uranus.
a) Because Uranus is to cold b) Because there isn't any oxygen on Uranus c) because as far as research is concerned there hasn't been any sort of plant or food that grows on Uranus
Yes, the Voyager 2 spacecraft made the only close flyby of Uranus in 1986. It discovered 10 new moons and provided the most detailed images to date of the planet and its atmosphere. No robotic landers or rovers have been sent to Uranus so far.
There hasn't but in the future maybe.
No. Voyager 2 flew past it though.
No, it is not currently possible for a spacecraft to land on Uranus because of its lack of a solid surface. Uranus is a gas giant composed mostly of hydrogen and helium, with no firm ground to land on. Any probe sent to Uranus would have to study the planet from its atmosphere or orbit.