No. In fact, using a telescope would almost guarantee that you would not see any meteors. Here's why.
Telescopes magnify a small area of the sky; the more powerful the telescope, the smaller the area. Telescopes are great for getting a close-up view of things that aren't moving too quickly; even then, with a big scope, you'll be re-centering it often as the Earth turns and the star/planet/comet/whatever drifts out of view.
Meteors can appear anywhere in the sky. They come VAGUELY from the constellation Perseus (for the Perseid meteors) or from other constellations that lend their names to the specific shower. Perseids enter the Earth's atmosphere at 130,000 miles per hour; they cross the sky in a second and either burn out or explode. There is NO WAY for you to see the incoming meteor, point the scope at it, and center; it's already gone. And since you don't know where the next meteor will appear, it would be like playing the lottery to point your telescope at a spot in the sky and just HOPE that you get lucky.
In a strong meteor shower, you might see a dozen in a minute, sometimes three or four together. Keep your head buried in a telescope, and I'll offer you a wager that you'll miss the best parts of the show.
Telescopes are great. But not for meteor showers.
Still determined to use your telescope during a meteor shower? Point it at the Moon! The Moon isn't THAT far away from Earth; the Moon is in the same meteor shower that the Earth is. Astronomers studying the Moon have watched hundreds of meteor strikes on the Moon over just the last year or so. Little meteors that make a nice light show in the sky aren't big enough to punch the Moon very hard, but there are those millions of millions of craters on the Moon, and each one was caused by a BIG impactor. There's chance - a SLIM chance - that you could see the explosion of a lunar impact.
Naked eye on the sky, or use your telescope on the Moon; either way, good hunting!
Halley's comet is only visible to the naked eye when it produces a tail.
Unfortunately I won't be there to see it unless I'm really lucky as I would be 98 years old by then.
...or perhaps not.
Yes. Open your eyes, and look up. The best time is between about 2AM and dawn.
As a matter of fact, it is very difficult to see meteors when using a telescope. A telescope's field of view is so narrow that you would need to be extremely lucky to see one, and meteors move too quickly for you to turn the scope to see it.
You can see meteor showers; when meteors enter the atmosphere they glow with heat and they are visible. The Perseid shower (in August) is a good opportunity.
The Andromeda Galaxy can be seen with the naked eye but it will only appear as a faint smudge.
No, you do not need a telescope to see ALL constellations.
No, but it is not easy to see without a telescope. It was not discovered until
1781, by someone using a telescope.
well if you feel a firing inferno coming towards you at great speeds from space, all you need to do is to look up and there you have it :)
If what you're trying to see is far away, then yes. If whatever you're trying to see is close, then it will make it blurry.
No. Meteors are definitely a naked-eye phenomenon. You would have to be really
lucky, and keep trying for a long time, to catch a meteor in a telescope.
Eclipses are visible, generally, only in certain locations. Meteor showers, however, affect the entire planet, and are generally a day or two long. The Perseid meteor shower is happening now, and will continue for a day or two more.
The Perseid meteor shower is best seen between about 2 AM and dawn, any day from August 9 to August 16 or so. The peak of the shower is in the pre-dawn hours of August 13.
No. You need a telescope to see Titan.
It is possible to see hundreds of shooting stars in a single night, during a meteor shower.
a telescope
sometimes they...... no, it's because they...... ugh..... it's cuz they left their glasses! jk,..... invest in a telescope.
They won't see the same meteor as you do, but they will see a meteor shower, as they are falling in many parts of the world. So they will see ones that you don't, but both of you will be able to enjoy watching a meteor shower.
Every summer
The Perseid Meteor Shower occurs in mid-August each year.
No, other people cannot see the meteor shower in multiplayer rooms or multiverse on poptropica. They will only see your character's head pop off and back on.
When they burn up in the atmosphere.
because they belve that the meteor can wish come true
Not well. A telescope allows you to focus in detail on a small area of the sky, but a meteor moves very rapidly across the sky. You cannot "follow" the meteor with a telescope, and it's over in a second or so. You might, through sheer luck, see a meteor flash across the telescope, but you wouldn't know what had happened - and by the time you turned away from the scope, it would be gone.
light pollution
Eclipses are visible, generally, only in certain locations. Meteor showers, however, affect the entire planet, and are generally a day or two long. The Perseid meteor shower is happening now, and will continue for a day or two more.
Because our atmosphere is so thick.
November 15 through November 20, 2016.