Nothing! Just ice (boring planet).
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.
The Cassini probe never went to Uranus. It went to Saturn. It was launched in 1997 and reached Saturn in 2004.
Sort Of. No human can go out that far. The only thing that can reach Uranus is a probe. The only probe I know of to reach Uranus was Voyager 2.
Miranda is not a space probe sent from Earth, it is a natural satellite of Uranus, i.e. a moon. The probe we sent to Uranus was Voyager 2, which visited in 1986. The confusion stems from our casual use of the word 'satellite'. Strictly, it means an object which orbits another, so the Moon is Earth's natural satellite, and we have put up many artificial satellites, such as those which study the weather and transmit television programmes. We have also sent spacecraft to become satellites of other bodies, such as the Mars Orbiter. If the craft has a different objective we usually call it a space probe.
As of now, there have been no robotic missions sent to Uranus. All exploration of Uranus has been undertaken by remote observation from telescopes and spacecraft, such as the Voyager 2 probe that flew by Uranus in 1986. There may be future missions planned to explore Uranus with robotic spacecraft.
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.
The Cassini probe never went to Uranus. It went to Saturn. It was launched in 1997 and reached Saturn in 2004.
William Armstrong II launched 1982. reached destination 1998.
Sort Of. No human can go out that far. The only thing that can reach Uranus is a probe. The only probe I know of to reach Uranus was Voyager 2.
Miranda is not a space probe sent from Earth, it is a natural satellite of Uranus, i.e. a moon. The probe we sent to Uranus was Voyager 2, which visited in 1986. The confusion stems from our casual use of the word 'satellite'. Strictly, it means an object which orbits another, so the Moon is Earth's natural satellite, and we have put up many artificial satellites, such as those which study the weather and transmit television programmes. We have also sent spacecraft to become satellites of other bodies, such as the Mars Orbiter. If the craft has a different objective we usually call it a space probe.
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.
no
As of now, there have been no robotic missions sent to Uranus. All exploration of Uranus has been undertaken by remote observation from telescopes and spacecraft, such as the Voyager 2 probe that flew by Uranus in 1986. There may be future missions planned to explore Uranus with robotic spacecraft.
The robotic Voyager 2 probe is the only thing that has ever been to Uranus.
In 1986, NASA's Voyager 2 was the first and only probe to visit Uranus.
Voyager 2
No humans have ever been to Uranus. Voyager 2 is the only space probe that has visited it.