Not with the naked eye. Uranus and Neptune are too faint to be seen without a telescope.
no planets crust does not have light of their own but the core of the earth has light of its own
All the planets revolve around the Sun in a counterclockwise direction, as seen from above the Earth's north pole.
He may easily have seen all of the planets in our solar system at one time or another, but the only one he or anybody else ever walked on is the Earth.
Neptune and Uranus cannot be seen without the aid of a teloscope.
earth
The constellations of the zodiac fall on the plane of the ecliptic (the plane in which the Earth orbits the Sun) and all the Sun's planets orbit also in the plane of the ecliptic. This means that ALL the planets eventually move through ALL the zodiacal constellations (as seen from Earth). It also therefore follows that the planets are never seen in the non zodiacal constellations.
Earth
no planets crust does not have light of their own but the core of the earth has light of its own
They reflect light from the Sun.
All the planets revolve around the Sun in a counterclockwise direction, as seen from above the Earth's north pole.
because the sun causes ther effect
All planets rotate. Even earth.
No, all the planets, including the Earth, orbit the Sun.
All of the planets can be seen from Earth, but a telescope or a powerful set of binoculars may be needed to see Uranus and Neptune. All of them cant be seen at certain times, when they are on the opposite side of the solar system on the other side of the sun for example.
They reflect the Suns light back to Earth
All sorts of things. The Sun, the Moon, planets, asteroids, meteors, galaxies, nebulas, satellites and other things.
All the planets in our solar system do this, except Venus and Uranus."Counterclockwise", for a planet's rotation, means "as seen from a place above the Earth's Northpole".