Any normal star bright enough to be seen with the naked eye as an individual star is in the Milky Way galaxy. A supernova in a nearby galaxy such as one of the Magellanic Clouds might be bright enough to be seen with the naked eye, but these are short-lived.
Usually not. You can see at least three galaxies (M31, the Large Magellanic Cloud, and the Small Magellanic Cloud) with the naked eye, but you can't distinguish individual stars. However, if there is a supernova explosion, for a few days it may be as bright as an entire galaxy.
Most of the stars in the galaxy are not visible to the naked eye. We can only see about 10,000 stars in an excellent,dark location. The number of stars in our galaxy are estimated at 100 billion.
No. Dwarf stars are very dim. A good example is Proxima Centauri. That star is the closest to the Earth but still invisible to the naked eye.
No, there is something called "dark matter." We can't see it and scientists don't know what it is, but it makes up about 80% of the universe.
Unfortunately, they are too distant to be seen with the naked eye, or even most telescopes.
Yes, if it is close enough. Dwarf stars aren't especialy bright, but they are quite common. Many of the dim stars that you see in the sky at night are dwarf stars.
Macroscopic means visible to naked eyes. The muscles are almost always visible to naked eyes. The only exception is the tiny muscle attached to hair root.
To a close approximation, none of them are visible to the unaided eye. With our bare eyes, we can see only a few thousand of the brightest ones. That's something like 0.0000025 percent of the stars in our own galaxy, and no individual stars in any other galaxy.
Any substance such as an mixture, colloid, suspension, solution, and all non-microscopic matters in our ecosystem are visible to the naked eyes.
the star's light is distorted by the earth's atmosphere before it reaches your eyes
We can see about 6500 stars just with our eyes when the sky is dark enough.With the sky being brighter,the number decreases.
Macroscopic means visible to naked eyes. The muscles are almost always visible to naked eyes. The only exception is the tiny muscle attached to hair root.
To a close approximation, none of them are visible to the unaided eye. With our bare eyes, we can see only a few thousand of the brightest ones. That's something like 0.0000025 percent of the stars in our own galaxy, and no individual stars in any other galaxy.
Yes i have seen it. it is visible because we can see lightning and lightning is plasma
All of the constellations that people have ever invented, and all the stars you can see with your eyes, are in the Milky Way Galaxy. The nearest other galaxy ... the so-called "Andromeda Galaxy" ... is technically visible to the naked eye. But it's not easy to see, and it's not bright enough to have been included in any constellation that people invented and made up stories about. And there's definitely no way you can possibly see individual stars in it.
close by bright stars
Neptune is the only planet not visible with the naked eye, though Uranus is extremely dim and hard to spot.
Very nearly all of them are not visible to the unaided eye. With our bare eyes, we can only see the brightest few thousand stars ... something like 0.0000025 percent of the stars in our own galaxy, and no individual stars in any other galaxy.
A galaxy is an enormous group of hundreds of millions or billions of star systems that orbit around a common center and gravitationally interact with each other. We live in the Milky Way galaxy, and all of the stars visible to our unaided eyes are part of our galaxy.
Any substance such as an mixture, colloid, suspension, solution, and all non-microscopic matters in our ecosystem are visible to the naked eyes.
Because we were made that way nobody actually knows why.
the star's light is distorted by the earth's atmosphere before it reaches your eyes
No, carbon dioxide is a colourless transparent gas.