Yes. In fact, it can be seen with the unaided eye! It looks like a very bright star to the eye, but through a telescope you can see cloud belts on the surface as well as the four brightest moons. It won't look as good as the pictures you see from NASA, but if it did, they wouldn't bother sending space probes!
no
when was the first teloscope made?
The angular diameter of Jupiter as seen from Callisto is approximately 65 arcminutes. This means that Jupiter appears to be about 1 degree wide in the sky from Callisto, which is one of Jupiter's moons.
That's because Jupiter is made out of gases, it can be seen every 1000 years, last time was 2006.
for inventing the teloscope
Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn can be seen with the naked eye.
Objects that cannot transit the Sun as seen from Jupiter are those that are orbiting closer to the Sun than Jupiter itself. This includes objects in orbits closer to the Sun than Jupiter's orbit, such as Mercury, Venus, and Earth. The relative alignment of these planets with Jupiter and the Sun makes it impossible for them to be seen transiting the Sun from Jupiter's perspective.
in a teloscope
you use a teloscope
you put them into the teloscope
use a teloscope, or look overhead at the milky way. You are part of the galaxy use a teloscope, or look overhead at the milky way. You are part of the galaxy
Jupiter.