| Jupiter was visited by a variety of probes.
 In 
							addition, you may want to check out
							
							AeroSpaceGuide. This site has some interesting 
							facts as well as mission summaries. The 
							first probe to visit Jupiter was the
							
							Pioneer 10. This probe was the first probe to 
							ever penetrate the 
							Asteroid Belt. This probe was 
							launched in May of 1972 and passed the orbit of 
							Pluto in June of 1983. 
							
							Pioneer 11, identical to
							
							Pioneer 10, was launched in May of 1973. The 
							encounter of Jupiter was in December of 1974 and a 
							visit of 
							Saturn occurred in September of 1979. 
							Contact was lost in November of 1995. The most infamous of all probes, the Voyager 
							series, was also designed to study the gas giants.
							
							Voyager 2 (launched before Voyager 1) was 
							launched in August of 1977. The Jupiter flyby was in 
							July 1979, the 
							Saturn flyby was in August 1981, the 
							Uranus flyby was in January 1986, and the
							Neptune flyby was in August 1989. The
							
							Voyager 2 has left the Solar System but is still 
							in operation. The
							
							Voyager 1 probe, launched in September of 1977, 
							would only visit Jupiter and 
							Saturn. The
							
							Voyager 2 probe was launched first after 
							discovering the orbital positions of all four gas 
							giants would allow the probes visit.
							
							Voyager 1 was launched as planned. The most 
							remarkable Jupiter mission was the
							
							Galileo probe. Launched in October of 1989, this 
							probe provided some of the best views of the moons 
							of Jupiter, and also inspired a flurry of protest. 
							The Galileo probe used planetary flyby's (including 
							Earth) to adjust trajectory and velocity. The power 
							plant within the probe uses radioisotope 
							thermoelectric generators or RTG's which is 
							nothing new. This type of power was also used in the 
							Pioneer and Voyager series as well. The protest came 
							in two forms: 
								Concern over impact with 
								Earth during its 
								flybyConcern over burn-up in the Jupiter 
								atmosphere There was actually several doomsday programs 
								here in the Bay Area voicing concerns over the 
								probes intentional impact with the Jovian 
								atmosphere. It was suggested that the RTG in 
								Galileo would be enough to initiate nuclear 
								fusion within the core of Jupiter. There are a 
								few reasons why this is not possible: 
									The amount of material in Galileo's RTG 
									was depleted and not enough top produce an 
									atomic weaponThe core of Jupiter is rock, not 
									hydrogen like the heart of a
									
									starWhile its been suggested Jupiter is a 
									failed 
									
									star, the lowest mass of a body that 
									could initiate fusion is a body with 0.8 
									solar masses The probe was burned up, safely, on 
									September 21, 2003. While not a Jupiter probe, the
									
									Ulysses is in a very elongated orbit to 
									study the 
									Sun. Its orbit passes Jupiter for 
									the purpose of gravity assist. Also not a Jupiter probe, the
									
									Cassini-Huygens probe past Jupiter on 
									its way to 
									Saturn. Some of the clearest 
									images of Jupiter were produced by the
									
									Cassini-Huygens probe. The Future: There is only one mission planned for a 
									return to Jupiter. Still in the design 
									stages,
									
									Prometheus One will study Jupiter in 
									depth and will also orbit three of its 
									moons: Callisto, Ganymede and 
									Europa. 
									Continual study of the presence of water 
									will be performs. The mission is only 
									proposed and has not entered design stages 
									so call your Congressman! Launch is proposed 
									for 2015. Back 
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