Because when it reached its destination it sent a probe into the atmosphere of Jupiter. With its cargo deployed, it became a scientific space craft, but in all actuality it in itself was the probe due to the fact that to not risk crashing into one of the moons that may be inhabited, they sent it down into the atmosphere of the planet itself, as not to risk human contamination of the moons, so if we were to find Biology on one of the moons, and our craft had crashed there, it may have been biology we accidently placed there, instead of biology that formed there. If we find it now, we know we have not contaminated it.
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Yes, the Galileo spacecraft sent a probe down into the atmosphere of Jupiter in 1995.
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.
The space probe that observed Jupiter is named Juno. Juno was launched by NASA in 2011 and entered orbit around Jupiter in 2016. It is studying the planet's atmosphere, magnetic field, and composition.
Titan, by the Huygens Probe, which was part of the Cassini-Huygens Probe.
galileo
The Space Probe Galileo was put into orbit around the planet Jupiter
galileo
No, Galileo was an unmanned probe. At this time, it is not possible for humans to travel to Jupiter.
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Voyager 1&2, Galileo Space Probe.
Yes, the Galileo spacecraft sent a probe down into the atmosphere of Jupiter in 1995.
it landed on jupiter in 1995 (december 7th)
Galileo
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.
STS-34 used Atlantis for the mission.
The space probe that observed Jupiter is named Juno. Juno was launched by NASA in 2011 and entered orbit around Jupiter in 2016. It is studying the planet's atmosphere, magnetic field, and composition.