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.
A shooting star is not a star. It is a misleading term for what is a meteor. It may look like a star shooting through space, but it is just a bit of dust that is burning up in our atmosphere and which we see very briefly as this happens. A constellation is a group of stars that we see as a pattern in the sky. There are 88 official constellations.
A shooting star, which is within the Earth's atmosphere.
It means you both saw a shooting star.........
through a telescope
Sure, but it looks like a star unless you have a telescope.
A shooting star is another name for a meteorite, small pieces of rock or ice passing through the upper atmosphere burning up as the air around them becomes thicker and creates friction. Some meteors dont burn up completely and land on earth
It depends, the more you believe that magic, and shooting stars are real, you may see them soon. Many people believe that every person has their own stars, and when a person passes out their star would be broken and would disappear and become a shooting star.... Maybe that's true.
He looked through the telescope and was able to see Venus better.
Yes you can through a large telescope.
Nothing..
it helps you see through it
Yes, through a telescope