Yes, several spacecraft have visited Jupiter, with the most notable being NASA's Galileo orbiter and Juno mission. Galileo, which operated from 1995 to 2003, provided extensive data on Jupiter's atmosphere, magnetosphere, and its moons, revealing the presence of liquid oceans under the icy crusts of Europa and Ganymede. Juno, which arrived in 2016, has been studying Jupiter's gravitational and magnetic fields, atmospheric composition, and weather patterns, offering insights into the planet's formation and evolution. These missions have greatly enhanced our understanding of Jupiter's complex system.
Saturn was discovered by ancient Greeks and Romans, so sorry no space crafts.
You can't you will probably fall in Jupiter and die. And why it's made of burring gases. so don't do it!
Yes. So far Uranus has been visited only by the Voyager 2 space probe.
So far 8 space probes have been to Jupiter: The first one was Pioneer 10 in 1973, followed by Pioneer 11 in 1974, Voyagers 1 and 2 in 1979, Ulysses in 1992, Galileo in 1995, Cassini in 2000, and New Horizons in 2007. Further probes planned are the Juno space probe, due to launch sometime in 2011, and the Europa Jupiter System Mission, planned for 2020.
Jupiter is a gas giant with no solid surface, so no physical objects or structures have been found on Jupiter. However, the planet has been extensively studied by spacecraft and telescopes, leading to discoveries of its atmosphere, magnetosphere, and moons.
Jupiter has a whole lot of moons including four big ones discovered by Galileo in the 16th century. He was the first one to use a telescope to study Jupiter. Other than those four, all the others are small and were discovered when spacecraft were sent to Jupiter in the 1970s.
Yes. A spacecraft has visited this planet. They came in peace. The space creatures discovered that humans fought wars with each other. As a result they wanted nothing to do with such wild animals so they left and went to a more civilized world.
No, Jupiter has not been visited by humans. The harsh radiation environment, extreme temperatures, and lack of solid surface make it difficult for human spacecraft to survive there. However, unmanned spacecraft like the Galileo and Juno missions have studied Jupiter from orbit.
Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to currently visit Neptune, passing 3,000 miles from the planet on August 25, 1989.
A visit to Jupiter is when a person learns to fly by 30 years of lessons from coral. They fly to Pluto, and find the transport to Jupiter.
Pluto has yet to be visited by a spacecraft because it is so far away.
A spacecraft left earth in late 1957 and returned in early 1958. Other than human spacecraft, no alien space craft has ever left or come to visit our planet, that we know of. It is possible some alien space craft may have visited earth millions of years ago. It is highly unlikely any craft has done so within the past few centuries.
Saturn was discovered by ancient Greeks and Romans, so sorry no space crafts.
Jupiter was known about in ancient times so no way of knowing when first discovered. it moons were discovered in 1600's.
You can't you will probably fall in Jupiter and die. And why it's made of burring gases. so don't do it!
The voyager 2 in 1781 Hell, Einstein's Theory of Relativity has just taken a bashing, Voyager 2 got to Uranus 196 years before it was launched. Voyager 2 reached Uranus in January 1986 over 9 years after it was launched in August 1977
Jupiter has about 63 Moons, discovered so far.