The Cassini-Huygens probe. cassini mapped and analyzed the atmosphere of Jupiter while the huygens probe was dropped deep into the atmosphere to record and take pictures of the atmospheric conditons. The two were named after famous astronomers and scientests; their last names obviously being cassini and huygens
Yes, the Galileo spacecraft sent a probe down into the atmosphere of Jupiter in 1995.
there were two main spacecrafts the voyager 1 and the voyager 2 that flew to Jupiter and in to deep space. It was in 1979.
The weight of a space probe on the surface of Jupiter would be significantly greater than its weight on Earth due to Jupiter's strong gravitational pull. Jupiter's gravity is about 24.79 m/s², which is roughly 2.5 times that of Earth's gravity. Therefore, to calculate the weight of the probe on Jupiter, you would multiply its mass by Jupiter's gravitational acceleration. For example, a 1,000 kg probe would weigh approximately 24,790 newtons on Jupiter.
Saturn
Voyager
Yes, the Galileo spacecraft sent a probe down into the atmosphere of Jupiter in 1995.
It was supposed to get to Jupiter on 2016 May 11
Yes,you big loser.
there were two main spacecrafts the voyager 1 and the voyager 2 that flew to Jupiter and in to deep space. It was in 1979.
Yes, the Galileo probe was sent to study Jupiter. It arrived at Jupiter in 1995 and spent eight years studying the planet, its moons, and its magnetosphere before its mission ended in 2003.
No. The Galileo space probe did not orbit Earth, though it did get a gravitational assist. It orbited Jupiter from 1995 until 2003 before it was sent into Jupiter, where it was destroyed.
The Juno space probe was launched on August 5, 2011, by NASA. It arrived at Jupiter on July 4, 2016, after a journey of nearly five years.
The European Cassini/ Huygens mission successfully launched the Huygens probe into the methane smog atmosphere surrounding Titan. The probe slowly parachuted down and sent pictures back to Earth of this icy world. It landed on a frozen beach surrounded by rocks of Ice.
The weight of a space probe on the surface of Jupiter would be significantly greater than its weight on Earth due to Jupiter's strong gravitational pull. Jupiter's gravity is about 24.79 m/s², which is roughly 2.5 times that of Earth's gravity. Therefore, to calculate the weight of the probe on Jupiter, you would multiply its mass by Jupiter's gravitational acceleration. For example, a 1,000 kg probe would weigh approximately 24,790 newtons on Jupiter.
There have been no man made robots or landers to land on Pluto yet. A probe called New Horizons is on it's way, it should finally get to Pluto in 2015, but won't land. It will fly by and take pictures.
because space probe whant to know more about it.
Cassini